Recruitment, Development PDF
Recruitment, Development PDF
Recruitment, Development PDF
Development, and
Retention of Information
Professionals:
Kristin Klinger
Julia Mosemann
Christine Bufton
Sean Woznicki
Deanna Zombro
Jamie Snavely
Lisa Tosheff
Yurchak Printing Inc.
List of Reviewers
Tami Albin, University of Kansas, USA
Kimberly Abrams, Emory University, USA
David Atkins, University of Knoxville, USA
Jessica Bailey, Johns Hopkins University, USA
Regina Beard, Kansas State University, USA
Carisse Berryhill, Abilene Christian University, USA
Heidi Blackburn, Kansas State University-Salina, USA
Rachel Brekhus, University of Missouri Columbia, USA
Marta Brunner, UCLA, USA
Tara Coleman, Kansas State University, USA
Marty Courtois, Kansas State University, USA
Gloria Creed-Dikeogu, Ottawa University, USA
Chad Curtis, New York University, USA
Jenny McCraw Dale, Kansas State University, USA
Trevor Dawes, Princeton University, USA
Erin Dini Davis, Utah State University, USA
Fran Devlin, University of Kansas, USA
Donna Ekart, Kansas State University, USA
Erin Ellis, University of Kansas, USA
Alisa Gonzalez, New Mexico State University, USA
Katrina Hanson, unaffiliated, USA
Arianne Hartsell-Gundy, Miami University, USA
Alex Hodges, American University, USA
Nikhat Ghouse, University of Kansas, USA
Kathleen Johnson, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA
Melia Erin Fritch, Kansas State University, USA
Melinda Karalius, East Baton Rouge Public Library, USA
JaNae Kinikin, Weber University, USA
Myron McGhee, Emory University, USA
Aimee Morgan, Stanford University, USA
Joseph Nicholson, Louisiana State University, USA
Jenny Oleen, Kansas State University, USA
Table of Contents
Foreword..............................................................................................................................................xiii
Preface................................................................................................................................................... xv
Acknowledgment................................................................................................................................. xix
Section 1
Recruitment
Chapter 1
Analysis of Job Responsibilities of Association of Research Libraries (ARL)
Human Resource Professionals................................................................................................................ 1
Gina R. Costello, Louisiana State University, USA
Alice Daugherty, Louisiana State University, USA
Chapter 2
Internships, Residencies, and Fellowships: Putting Time-Limited Appointments
in Succession Planning.......................................................................................................................... 27
Rachel Kuhn Stinehelfer, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, USA
Michael A. Crumpton, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, USA
Chapter 3
Strategies for Diversity Initiatives: A Case Study at University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries.......... 46
Toni Anaya, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA
Charlene Maxey-Harris, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA
Anchalee Panigabutra-Roberts, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA
Chapter 4
Librarians for Tomorrow at the San Jos Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Joint Library.............................. 62
Yuhfen Diana Wu, Chinese American Librarians Association; San Jos State University, USA
Peggy Cabrera, Bibliotecas Para La Gente chapter of Reforma; San Jos State University, USA
Jeff Paul, Librarians for Tomorrow; San Jos State University, USA
Chapter 5
Recruitment of Subject Specialists to Academic Librarianship ............................................................ 83
Charlene Kellsey, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
Stephanie Alexander, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
James P. Ascher, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
Matthew Brower, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
Chapter 6
Recruitment Experiences in Area Studies Library Organizations: The Case of ACRLs Western
European Studies Section (WESS) ..................................................................................................... 112
George I. Paganelis, California State University - Sacramento, USA
Section 2
Development
Chapter 7
The Professionalization of Knowledge Management ......................................................................... 139
Betsy Van der Veer Martens, University of Oklahoma, USA
Suliman Hawamdeh, University of Oklahoma, USA
Chapter 8
Global Issues in Human Resource Management and Their Significance to Information
Organizations and Information Professionals ..................................................................................... 157
Gail Munde, East Carolina University, USA
Chapter 9
Trends in Integration-Based Orientation in Academic Libraries ........................................................ 170
Aimee Denise Loya, University of California - Irvine, USA
Deborah Stansbury Sunday, University of California - Irvine, USA
Chapter 10
Teaching New Librarians How to Teach: A Model for Building a Peer Learning Program ............... 179
Merinda Kaye Hensley, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Chapter 11
The Career Development Compass: Roadmap to Building a Diversified Portfolio
of Professional Capabilities for Information Professionals ................................................................ 191
Joel B. Thornton, Texas A&M University, USA
Section 3
Retention
Chapter 12
Understanding Organizational Culture and Group Dynamics: Reframing the Normative
Orientation of the Role of Information Professionals within Organizations ...................................... 206
Doralyn Rossmann, Montana State University, USA
Chapter 13
Making the Best of the Best: Strategies for Effective Retention ........................................................ 218
Christy Groves, Middle Tennessee State University, USA
William Black, Middle Tennessee State University, USA
Chapter 14
Use of the Evolutionary Conscious Model to Sustain a Formal Mentoring Program ........................ 237
Janine Golden, Texas Womans University, USA
Chapter 15
Mentoring and Supervision? Or, Mentoring versus Supervision? ...................................................... 251
Deborah Hicks, University of Alberta, Canada
Jeanette Buckingham, University of Alberta, Canada
Margaret Law, University of Alberta, Canada
Chapter 16
Mentoring When Librarians Have Faculty Status............................................................................... 267
Vincent J. Novara, University of Maryland Libraries, USA
Phillipa Brown, University of Maryland Libraries, USA
M. Jane Williams, University of Maryland Libraries, USA
Compilation of References ............................................................................................................... 281
About the Contributors .................................................................................................................... 309
Index ................................................................................................................................................... 317
Foreword..............................................................................................................................................xiii
Preface................................................................................................................................................... xv
Acknowledgment................................................................................................................................. xix
Section 1
Recruitment
Chapter 1
Analysis of Job Responsibilities of Association of Research Libraries (ARL)
Human Resource Professionals................................................................................................................ 1
Gina R. Costello, Louisiana State University, USA
Alice Daugherty, Louisiana State University, USA
Costello and Daugherty describe the results of an exploratory survey given to human resource professionals with the Association of Research Libraries (ARL). Costello and Daugherty look at how each
of the 123 institutional members of ARL define the role of human resource professionals with in the
library environment.
Chapter 2
Internships, Residencies, and Fellowships: Putting Time-Limited Appointments
in Succession Planning.......................................................................................................................... 27
Rachel Kuhn Stinehelfer, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, USA
Michael A. Crumpton, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, USA
Stinehelfer and Crumpton address in Chapter 2 that information science professionals need additional
management training, besides what is given in library schools, to be fully prepared to take positions in
middle and upper management. The authors offer strategies for how to use a time limited appointment
to fast track an individuals managerial training, highlighting time limited appointments such as internships, residencies, and fellowships.
Chapter 3
Strategies for Diversity Initiatives: A Case Study at University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries ......... 46
Toni Anaya, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA
Charlene Maxey-Harris, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA
Anchalee Panigabutra-Roberts, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA
Anaya et al address both the difficulties of and possible strategies for recruiting and retaining diverse
library faculty to typically non-diverse populations. Specifically, they detail the diversity recruitment
and retention efforts at their home institutionUniversity of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries.
Chapter 4
Librarians for Tomorrow at the San Jos Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Joint Library ............................. 62
Yuhfen Diana Wu, Chinese American Librarians Association; San Jos State University, USA
Peggy Cabrera, Bibliotecas Para La Gente chapter of Reforma; San Jos State University, USA
Jeff Paul, Librarians for Tomorrow; San Jos State University, USA
Wu, Cabrera, and Paul address current diversity recruitment and retention initiatives in library schools
and offer a case study of San Jos State Universitys (SJSU) School of Library and Information Science.
The authors describe the process of applying for federal funding from the Laura Bush 21st Century Library
Program and the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) to support the recruitment of students
of color to the San Jos State Universitys School of Library and Information Science program.
Chapter 5
Recruitment of Subject Specialists to Academic Librarianship ............................................................ 83
Charlene Kellsey, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
Stephanie Alexander, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
James P. Ascher, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
Matthew Brower, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
Kellsey et al describe the fellowship program at University of Colorado at Boulder (CU) Libraries that
grew from the Committee on Recruitment to the Profession of Academic Librarianship. This fellowship
is for current graduate students at CU who are interested in using their subject expertise within the field
of academic librarianship.
Chapter 6
Recruitment Experiences in Area Studies Library Organizations: The Case of ACRLs Western
European Studies Section (WESS) ..................................................................................................... 112
George I. Paganelis, California State University - Sacramento, USA
Paganelis raises awareness about the difficulty of recruiting suitable candidates to area studies academic
librarianship. Paganelis identifies several barriers including poor public perceptions of librarianship, the
library and information science curriculum, and lack of full-time professional positions.
Section 2
Development
Chapter 7
The Professionalization of Knowledge Management ......................................................................... 139
Betsy Van der Veer Martens, University of Oklahoma, USA
Suliman Hawamdeh, University of Oklahoma, USA
Martens and Hawamdeh explore the evolving and often misunderstood profession of knowledge management. Martens and Hawamdeh contend that the need for knowledge management professions will
continue to grow in both public-sector and the private-sector.
Chapter 8
Global Issues in Human Resource Management and Their Significance to Information
Organizations and Information Professionals ..................................................................................... 157
Gail Munde, East Carolina University, USA
Munde examines the role of human resource management within the work practices and environments
of information professionals with an emphasis on global issues. Munde addresses, specifically, the
challenging issues of skill shortages, talent management, shifting demographics, work/life balance, and
managing intergenerational and intercultural work groups.
Chapter 9
Trends in Integration-Based Orientation in Academic Libraries ........................................................ 170
Aimee Denise Loya, University of California - Irvine, USA
Deborah Stansbury Sunday, University of California - Irvine, USA
Loya and Sunday discuss the vital necessity of developing and implementing an orientation program
that is comprehensive as well as addresses the unique organizational cultures of each library. Loya and
Sundays justification for an increased emphasis on orientation in libraries focuses on the key concepts
of integration and retention.
Chapter 10
Teaching New Librarians How to Teach: A Model for Building a Peer Learning Program ............... 179
Merinda Kaye Hensley, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Hensley tackles the problematic instructional situation in academic libraries. Since many librarians are
not trained teachers upon entering the academy, Hensley asserts that there needs to be a training program
for them once they arrive. Specifically, she discusses a peer learning training program that not only facilitates team building but also takes advantage of the expertise of seasoned instructional librarians.
Chapter 11
The Career Development Compass: Roadmap to Building a Diversified Portfolio
of Professional Capabilities for Information Professionals ................................................................ 191
Joel B. Thornton, Texas A&M University, USA
Thornton addresses the often overlooked career development planning of Information Professionals
(IPs). To ensure employability and career mobility, Thornton encourages IPs to begin planning their
career objectives and goals as early as graduate school.
Section 3
Retention
Chapter 12
Understanding Organizational Culture and Group Dynamics: Reframing the Normative
Orientation of the Role of Information Professionals within Organizations ...................................... 206
Doralyn Rossmann, Montana State University, USA
Rossman explores organizational culture and group dynamics from the framework of Distributed Leadership, Job Embeddedness, the Bad Apple Concept, and Positive Relationships at Work. She shares case
studies and examples of each of these concepts and how they can be applied in an information setting.
Chapter 13
Making the Best of the Best: Strategies for Effective Retention ........................................................ 218
Christy Groves, Middle Tennessee State University, USA
William Black, Middle Tennessee State University, USA
Groves and Black identify strategies for the effective retention of employees through the careful selection, training, and commitment of these individuals by library management. They address hiring tips
and employee orientation strategies which can lead to greater employee motivation and retention, but
also address hiring and retention pitfalls, generational differences, and external challenges.
Chapter 14
Use of the Evolutionary Conscious Model to Sustain a Formal Mentoring Program ........................ 237
Janine Golden, Texas Womans University, USA
Golden addresses formal and informal mentoring programs currently available to information professionals, highlighting specific mentoring case studies from the Professional Education for Librarians in Small
Communities (PELSC), American Library Associations (ALA) Library Leadership and Management
Administration (LLAMA), and the Florida Department of States Sunshine State Library Leadership
Institute (SSLLI).
Chapter 15
Mentoring and Supervision? Or, Mentoring versus Supervision? ...................................................... 251
Deborah Hicks, University of Alberta, Canada
Jeanette Buckingham, University of Alberta, Canada
Margaret Law, University of Alberta, Canada
Hicks, Buckingham, and Law explore the tension between the roles of mentor and supervisor with a
mentee/supervisee. What happens when these lines are blurred? The authors describe some of these
challenges and/or benefits as well as offer tips on how to make these relationships successful to both
parties involved.
Chapter 16
Mentoring When Librarians Have Faculty Status............................................................................... 267
Vincent J. Novara, University of Maryland Libraries, USA
Phillipa Brown, University of Maryland Libraries, USA
M. Jane Williams, University of Maryland Libraries, USA
Brown, Novara, and Williams conclude the book with a discussion centered on how mentoring differs
when librarians have or are working toward faculty status in a university setting.
Compilation of References ............................................................................................................... 281
About the Contributors .................................................................................................................... 309
Index ................................................................................................................................................... 317
xiii
Foreword
Ive often commented that if you had asked me what academic librarians would be doing in the 21st
century when I was in library school in the early 1980s, I would not have come close to predicting our
future. Those of you who are of a certain age can recall what kind of work you were doing professionally twenty-five years ago or so. As a reference librarian, I was serving on a desk about 20 hours per
week, working from a print reference collection and a first generation automated circulation system. I
taught bibliographic instruction sessions using an overhead projector. I showed students sample pages
from the Readers Guide to Periodical Literature and the librarys green-bar serials holdings list. My
exposure to computers and automation in library school was an assignment using an OCLC beehive
terminal and another using punch cards and a knitting needle. The Walkman had just been introduced
in 1980 and the first IBM PC in 1981. Change, indeed!
As I pondered my first job move in this profession on the cusp of great change, I decided to apply for
a position that involved supervision. I took that step and havent looked back or been disappointed about
my decision, although one of my favorite Woody Allen quotes humorously reminds me that, on some
days, the administrative career path can be rocky: More than any other time in history, mankind faces
a crossroads. One path leads to despair and utter hopelessness. The other, to total extinction. Let us pray
we have the wisdom to choose correctly. While it always gets a laugh, Allens quote also provides a
wonderful launching point to talk about the themes of this wonderful collection: our human resources.
The library workforce plays a key role in our effort to remain relevant on our campuses. The importance of building and sustaining a strong and talented workforce has taken on a sense of urgency in the
early years of the 21st century. It may not be too hyperbolic to say that human resource management
and development is more critical than ever in our profession, and our success depends, in large part,
on taking advantage of and responsibility for effective and creative recruitment, retention, and professional development for all library staff. As we look at the demographics of our profession, the current
economic environment, changing forms of scholarly communications and applications of technology,
new modes of teaching and learning, and other factors that impact our staff and the work they do, we
look to strategies and best practices as important tools to help us think creatively and resourcefully about
the professional workforce. This volume provides a timely contribution to that toolkit by focusing on
current trends in recruitment, retention, and professional development.
Many common themes are threaded through the articles in this collection with succession planning, mentoring, and recruitment and retention being the strongest. The chapters that focus on these
topics contribute to our professions national dialog around critical questions: How do we mentor and
develop the next generation of library staff, particularly leaders? How can we to attract a diverse pool
of potential workers to our profession, especially to hard-to-fill jobs in academic libraries? How do we
xiv
mentor effectively? The guidance offered by the authors is often practical and based on tested strategies
at their institutions, but the articles also promote a research agenda for further exploration of library
human resource management and development. In addition to these key themes, the collection branches
into other important areas including the role of the library human resource professional, the impact of
organizational culture, and the emergence of ancillary professions such as knowledge management.
As higher education responds to a changing economic, political and social environment, we must
be resilient and responsive ourselves and be willing to explore and experiment as we develop the 21st
century library workforce. The editors of Recruitment, Development, and Retention of Information Professionals: Trends in Human Resources and Knowledge Management are to be commended for building
this robust collection of articles. I encourage the readers of this collection to take the research, ideas and
strategies presented, adapt them to their own environment, and share the results.
Lori A. Goetsch
Kansas State University, USA
Lori A. Goetsch was appointed Dean of Libraries and Professor at Kansas State University in July, 2004. Previously she held
positions at the University of Maryland; University of Tennessee; Michigan State University; and the University of Illinois
at Chicago. She has master's and bachelor's degrees, both in English, from Illinois State University, Normal, and a masters
in library and information science from Dominican University in River Forest, IL. Goetsch is President of the Association
of College and Research Libraries, the 13,000 member academic library division of the American Library Association. She
also chairs the State Library of Kansas Board and is a member of the Advisory Board for the School of Library and Information Management at Emporia State University. Goetsch serves on the editorial board of the journal portal: Libraries and the
Academy. Her publications include articles in portal, College and Research Libraries, and Journal of Library Administration.
In her spare time, she likes to golf and sing (not necessarily at the same time!).
xv
Preface
xvi
into the experience and educational level of human resource professional in an academic library setting, the roles these individuals have in their organization, and the ways in which they interact with the
university human resource departments. In Chapter 2 Stinehelfer and Crumpton argue that information
science professionals need additional management training, beyond what is given in library schools,
to be fully prepared to take positions in middle and upper management. The authors offer strategies
for using time limited appointments such as internships, residencies, and fellowships to fast track an
individuals managerial training. Stinehelfer and Crumpton offer excellent tips for ensuring that these
programs succeed and thereby better prepare new librarians to take on leadership roles in their libraries.
Stinehelfer and Crumpton also raise awareness of the need for succession planning in todays current
library environment. In Chapter 3, Anaya et al. address both the difficulties of and possible strategies for
recruiting diverse library faculty to typically non-diverse populations and subsequently retaining them.
Specifically, they detail the diversity recruitment and retention efforts at their home institutionThe
University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries. Anaya et al. provide concrete and proven strategies other
libraries can modify to fit their own efforts in expanding diversity. In Chapter 4, Wu, Cabrera, and Paul
address current diversity recruitment and retention initiatives in library schools and offer a case study
of San Jos State Universitys (SJSU) School of Library and Information Science. The authors describe
the process of applying for federal funding from the Laura Bush 21st Century Library Program and the
Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) to support the recruitment of students of color to
the San Jos State Universitys School of Library and Information Science program. The authors also
outline strategies for other library school mentoring programs, drawing from their own experience with
the management, successes, and challenges of their mentoring program, Librarians of Tomorrow. In
Chapter 5, Kellsey et al. describe the fellowship program at The University of Colorado at Boulder (CU)
Libraries that grew from the Committee on Recruitment to the Profession of Academic Librarianship.
The fellowship about which they write is for current graduate students at CU who are interested in using their subject expertise within the field of academic librarianship. Based on the results of a survey
they administered, Kellsey et al. found the fellowship program to be successful. A key finding was that
the majority of the participants were either working in the field or attending library science graduate
programs. In Chapter 6, Paganelis raises awareness about the difficulty of recruiting suitable candidates
to area studies academic librarianship. Paganelis identifies several barriers, including poor public perceptions of librarianship, inadequacies of the library and information science curriculum, and lack of
full-time professional positions. In addition to discussing general recruitment practices that might ease
the problem, Paganelis details the recruitment efforts and activities of the Recruitment to the Profession
Committee of ACRLs Western European Studies Section (WESS).
The second section of the book addresses the development of IP skill sets. Without continuing education and professional development opportunities, IPs will stagnate in their profession. This highlights
current approaches and models to building and sustaining competencies. In Chapter 7, Martens and Hawamdeh explore the evolving and often misunderstood profession of knowledge management. Martens
and Hawamdeh contend that the need for knowledge management professions will continue to grow in
both the public-sector and the private-sector. Their analysis of job postings for knowledge management
professionals examines the elements of locale and qualifications as well as roles and responsibilities.
This collection of empirical data provides insight into the potential skill sets that will be required of
professionals in the field. In Chapter 8, Munde examines the role of human resource management within
the work practices and environments of information professionals, with an emphasis on global issues.
Munde addresses, specifically, the challenging issues of skills shortages, talent management, shift-
xvii
ing demographics, work/life balance, and managing intergenerational and intercultural work groups.
Within the discussion of these specific issues, Munde offers concrete suggestions for human resource
management professionals who work in the information environment. In Chapter 9, Loya and Sunday
discuss the vital necessity of developing and implementing a comprehensive orientation program that
addresses the unique organizational cultures of each library. Loya and Sundays justification for an
increased emphasis on orientation in libraries centers on the key concepts of integration and retention.
They address such issues as: turnover, organizational loyalty, team culture, and inclusiveness. Loya and
Sunday contend that integration-based orientation programs are key to organizational health and success. In Chapter 10, Hensley tackles the problematic instructional situation in academic libraries. Since
many librarians are not trained teachers upon entering the academy, Hensley asserts that libraries need
to provide training programs for them once they arrive. Specifically, she discusses a peer learning training program that not only facilitates team building but also takes advantage of the expertise of seasoned
instructional librarians. Hensley offers practical suggestions for developing teaching skills and provides
a list of further readings in pedagogy. In Chapter 11, Thornton addresses the often overlooked career
development planning of Information Professionals (IPs). To ensure employability and career mobility,
Thornton encourages IPs to begin planning their career objectives and goals as early as graduate school.
Thornton identifies several key reasons why it is essential for IPs to do such advanced planning; most
prevalent among these is the proliferation of free information on the Web. Thorntons chapter provides
specific suggestions for IPs to develop diversified capabilities in order to remain competitive in a rapidly
changing information environment. In Chapter 12, Rossmann explores organizational culture and group
dynamics from the framework of Distributed Leadership, Job Embeddedness, the Bad Apple Concept,
and Positive Relationships at Work, sharing case studies and examples of each of these concepts and
how they can be applied in an information setting. Rossman nicely details a comparison between organizational culture as a function of management and organizational culture from the perspective of the
individual in library and information science curriculum. The authors conclude the chapter with tips
on how to use group dynamics and knowledge of organizational culture to recruit, develop, and retain
information science professionals.
The final section of the text discusses multiple strategies for retention of IPs. One of the most significant factors in retention is both formal and informal mentoring. This section delves into many of the
challenges new IPs face and must overcome while practicing their occupation. Chapter 13 identifies
strategies for the effective retention of employees through the careful selection, training, and support of
these individuals by library management. Groves and Black address hiring tips and employee orientation strategies that can lead to greater employee motivation and retention. They also address hiring and
retention pitfalls, generational differences, and external challenges. Groves and Black conclude their
chapter with potential directions for future research. In Chapter 14, Golden addresses formal and informal
mentoring programs currently available to information professionals, highlighting specific mentoring
case studies from three organizations: the Professional Education for Librarians in Small Communities
(PELSC); the American Library Associations (ALA) Library Leadership and Management Administration (LLAMA); and the Florida Department of States Sunshine State Library Leadership Institute
(SSLLI) . Drawing from personal experience with these three programs, Golden addresses successes and
failures of mentoring programs, career development strategies, mentor matching, and also mentor/mentee
training strategies. Goldens own mentoring model, the Evolutionary Conscious Model, is outlined with
tips on the partnering (pairing) process, program coordination and program sustainability. In Chapter
15, Hicks, Buckingham, and Law explore the tension between the roles of mentor and supervisor with
xviii
a mentee/supervisee. What happens when these lines are blurred? The authors describe some of these
challenges and benefits and also offer tips on how to make these relationships successful to both parties
involved. Boundaries and the focus and nature of the relationship are addressed as well as role ambiguity. The authors also mention future research directions, specifically highlighting the lack of current
literature regarding the impact of mentoring relationships on the supervisee and other coworkers, not
just the mentee. Chapter 16 concludes the book with a discussion centered upon how mentoring differs
when librarians have or are working toward faculty status in a university setting. Drawing from several
formal university library mentoring programs, Brown, Novara, and Williams highlight the challenges
and benefits of mentoring librarians who have faculty status and also provide best practices relevant
to other mentoring programs with faculty status librarians and to mentoring programs for all librarians
seeking a formal or informal mentoring relationship.
These three sections delve into some of the most prevalent and pervasive concerns facing IPs in the
21st century. As technology continues to develop and as public, corporate, and academic work places
increasingly adopt similar practices in their management of recruiting, developing, and retaining employees, IPs must raise awareness of their unique skills and circumstances in order to be successful and
competitive.
xix
Acknowledgment
We would like to acknowledge the following individuals: Dean Lori Goetsch, Marcia Stockham, Laurel
Littrell, Debbie Madsen, Charlene Simser, Jason Coleman, and the friendly staff at Bluestem Bistro in
Manhattan, KS.
Elisabeth Pankl
Danielle Theiss-White
Mary C. Bushing
Editors
Section 1
Recruitment
Chapter 1
aBstract
The purpose of this chapter was to convey the results of an exploratory survey given to human resource
professionals working within the 123 institutional members of the Association of Research Libraries
(ARL). The objective was to further define the role of human resource professionals in ARL libraries and
reveal the nature and extent of human resource support for faculty and staff at ARL libraries. Respondents
were recruited through email and asked to characterize their human resource functions by answering
35 open-ended and closed survey questions via an online proprietary survey tool. The response rate
was 30% and provided data for the researchers to examine the experience level and education of human resource professionals, the role these individuals play in the day-to-day library operations, and the
extent of interaction with the university human resource department.
IntrodUctIon
The role of human resource management within
higher education reflects a vital yet complex function of leadership and management that affects
organizational development. An integral area of
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-601-8.ch001
Copyright 2010, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited.
BacKgroUnd
The tasks of academic library human resource
personnel are similar to human resource departments at the university level; human resource
personnel at many levels are familiar with employment laws, engage in hiring practices, participate
in evaluations and performance appraisals, deal
with conflict resolutions, offer training and professional development, recruit and train new hires
and work with diversity initiatives, among other
tasks. Even with the depth of responsibilities held
by academic library human resource personnel
there is a lack of literature supporting their function and duties.
Library human resource professionals are effective and strategic elements in change management. Library employees in the new millennium
are seeking change from hierarchical styles of
administration, casual styles of training, unspoken policies, the overuse of stagnant committees,
and other attributes that lead to an organizations
character. Generally, employees want a clear focus
of leadership goals and guidelines. The human
resource representative is in a good position to
mediate ideas and goals between all levels of
administration and staff through assessment and
accountability whereby identifying needed process changes and reinforcing behavioral changes
(Kreitz, 2008, p. 104).
In his 2008 article, Human Resource Administration in the Academic Library, Dennis R.
Defa emphasizes the sometimes complex human
resource challenges found in a university library
and recommends that a trained in-house (emphasis
added) human resources professional would be
better suited to handle such responsibilities in
the academic library because of their familiarity
with university policies. Large research libraries
have unique staffing needs that differ from other
areas of the university. Not only are there a large
mix of positions working together (faculty, staff,
students, etc.) and several library departments
collaborating on projects (reference, collection
Methodology
survey Instrument
Academic library human resource professionals
play an important role in the recruitment, hiring
and retention of library faculty. Through the 35
question survey instrument Analysis of Job Responsibilities of Association of Research Libraries
(ARL) Human Resource Professionals (Appendix A) the researchers sought to better illustrate the
current role and responsibilities of these human
resource professionals. The researchers chose an
online survey to obtain information from a variety
of respondents efficiently. The survey questions
were organized into three sections, About the
University, About Libraries HR Department
or HR Personnel, and Questions for Libraries
the role of the library human resources professional in human resource responsibilities at the
institution. The researchers asked the main human
resources contact to describe the role of the libraries human resource professional(s) and the role
of the institutional human resource department,
and how many and what type of individuals are
hired in the library each year. The researchers
asked several questions about the library human
resource contacts role in the recruitment and
hiring of library faculty. To gage the level of involvement, questions about the human resource
professionals role in promoting diversity in the
workplace and participating in outreach activities
were also included.
The final portion of the survey included questions about the library human resource contacts
professional development activities. The questions
related to the number and type of conferences and
workshops attended, whether the human resource
professional has given presentations or published
in human resource or library journals, and what
professional societies he or she is a member. From
the questions in the two subsections, the researchers hoped to gain a better understanding of the
library human resource contacts job as it relates
to hiring faculty specifically and how active he
or she is in the profession.
Participants
The survey subjects were identified by the researchers as human resource contacts working in
ARL institutions. To compile the list of contacts
the researchers created a list of ARL institutions
and visited the libraries websites to identify the
responsible parties. Whenever possible, titles and
department names were noted on the list.
The researchers attempted to identify the main
human resources contact (i.e., the manager or
department head), but when this was not possible,
any individual associated with human resource
issues was included on the list. When a library
website did not include a specific page for human
data collection
The survey instrument was input into Zoomerang,
a proprietary online survey tool. Using a format
such as Zoomerang to display the survey questions and collect the results enabled the researchers to choose different types of question formats
and gather data for collation and analysis more
easily. The software does have some limitations,
though. One respondent indicated that the question
formatting in the software was confusing when it
contained multiple parts.
Number
Administrative Officer
11
12
12
survey results
A total of 40 individuals completed the survey
instrument. The survey questions included closed,
open-ended, and a combination of the two types of
Figure 1. Question 8 What is the university job classification for Libraries HR professionals?
the Libraries human resource personnel report directly to a Dean, Director, or University Librarian.
Only five percent of the human resource professionals responding stated that they reported to a
combination of the university human resources
department and a local administrator within the
library. The remaining 15% of respondents who
provided further comment to the question indicated that they reported to administrators such
as the Associate Dean for Finance and Facilities,
Associate Director for Administrative Services,
Area Finance/Administrative Officer, Associate
University Librarian for Administrative Services,
Associate Dean for Finance and Facilities, and
the President.
In response to survey question nine about the
level of interaction between the University HR Department and the Libraries HR professionals, 80%
of respondents indicated moderate to maximum
contact. Additional comments indicated that the
libraries human resource professionals are communicating regularly and some are maintaining
close working relationships with the university or
institutional human resources department.
The majority of respondents indicated that their
library adopts human resource policies from the
university or institutional human resource policies.
Twenty-three percent of the respondents indicated
that their libraries model policies after university
Figure 2. Question 18: I have worked at this ARL Library as an HR professional for _ years.
10
Professional Development
Forty-six percent of the survey respondents
indicated that they attend three to four human
resource related conferences or workshops per
year, and thirteen percent do not attend any. The
majority of respondents who do attend conferences or workshops do so at their institution or
at a state or regional level. More than half, 57%
of the respondents stated they do not give professional presentations outside of their perspective
libraries regarding human resource related issues.
Similarly 92% of Libraries HR professionals have
not published in human resource or library journals
concerning human resource related issues.
11
Figure 3. Question 28: Beyond the hiring process, what interaction do you have with professional librarians (faculty)? Check all that apply.
dIscUssIon
Results of the survey present a general view of
library human resource professionals relationships to the institutional or university human
resource department, their relationships with
library faculty from interview to daily interaction
after hire, their supervisory responsibilities and
reporting structure, and their level of involvement
in professional development activities. Each of the
survey sections has the potential to provide more
research opportunities, and could be developed
beyond the questions found in this instrument.
The survey results indicate that ARL libraries employ their own human resource personnel,
usually an individual classified as management
working 40 hours a week primarily on human resources duties. Many of the individuals responsible
for human resource duties possess a degree higher
than a bachelors degree, and are compensated with
salaries greater than $50,000 when in management positions. Overall, this group of respondents
have been human resource professionals and have
worked at their current ARL institution for a more
than 15 years. The researchers sought responses
from as many individuals responsible for human
resource duties at ARL institutions as possible
without delineating between a library dean who
12
fUrther research
The research presented in this manuscript should
be considered an initial step in future assessment
conclUsIon
Human resource professionals at ARL institutions
share the responsibility with library administration
to improve efficiency and productivity of all staff
and faculty. In ARL libraries, human resource
personnel assist with hiring, training, and evalu-
13
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Baldin, D. A. (1996). The academic librarians
human resources handbook: Employer rights
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Unlimited.
Boudreau, J. W., & Ramstad, P. M. (2007). Beyond
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Management, 7(1), 1316.
Fox, D. (2007). A demographic and career profile
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doi:10.1016/j.acalib.2007.05.006
Goodrich, J., & Singer, P. M. (2007). Human
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right job. Chicago: ALA Editions.
Kulik, C. T. (2004). Human resources for the nonHR manager. NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
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academic librarians to job loss through downsizing: An exploratory study. College & Research
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Munro, J. (2006, Spring). SCONUL Human
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Nawe, J. (2001). Human resource for library and
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Raschke, G. K. (2003). Hiring and recruitment
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3(1), 5367. doi:10.1353/pla.2003.0017
Roknuzzaman, M. (2007). Status of human resource management in public university libraries
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8Rs Canadian Library Human Resource Study.
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15
16
2.
3.
4.
Does the Library employ either part time or full time human resources (HR) professional(s)?
Additional Comment
6. If you answered Yes to question 5, please list the number of individuals in each HR related position and indicate their work status (part or full time):
Management
Professional staff
Clerical or administrative assistant(s)
Other, please specify
7. If you answered No to question 5, please indicate how HR matters are handled in the library:
8. What is the university job classification for Libraries HR professionals?
Management
Staff
Faculty
Other, please specify
9. The Libraries HR Professional(s) report to:
Dean, Director, or University Librarian
University Human Resources Department
A combination of the two
Other, please specify
10. What is the level of interaction between the University HR Department and the Libraries HR
Professionals?
Minimal only for information
Moderate regular contact with HR personnel
Maximum very close working relationship between departments and/or HR personnel is employed
by university HR Department.
Other, please specify
11. Libraries human resource policies are
Adopted from University HR Department policies
Different, but modeled after University HR Department policies
Created by the libraries administration
Other, please specify
17
12. Please provide any additional information about the relationship between the Libraries HR
Professionals and the University HR Department
18
19
28. Beyond the hiring process, what interaction do you have with professional librarians (faculty)?
Check all that apply.
Committee work
Mentoring or support
Answer university or general HR questions
Other, please specify
Professional development
29. I attend approximately __ number of HR related conferences and workshops per year
1-2
3-4
None
Other, please specify
30. If you answered a or b to the above, please specify how many conferences and workshops are
National or international 1 2 3 4 5 6 N/A
State or regional 1 2 3 4 5 6 N/A
At my institution 1 2 3 4 5 6 N/A
Other, please specify
31. I have given professional presentations outside of my Library about HR related issues. If yes,
number of times:
32. I have published in HR or Library journals about HR related issues.
If yes, number of times:
33. I am a member of the following professional societies:
American Libraries Association. Name roundtables or sections of which you are a member:
HR professional organizations. Please list
Other, please specify:
34. Please provide any additional comments related to this survey.
35. Optional information
Name:
ARL Institution:
Address 1:
Address 2:
City/Town:
State/Province:
Zip/Postal Code:
Country:
Email Address:
Thank you for your participation in this survey!
20
2.
3.
4.
6.
7.
Does the Library employ either part time or full time human resources (HR) professional(s)?
Yes: 96%
No: 4%
If you answered Yes to question 5, please list the number of individuals in each HR related position and indicate their work status (part or full time): ***
In general respondents indicated full time employment.
If you answered No to question 5, please indicate how HR matters are handled in the
library:***
Human resource matters are handled by the Associate Dean for Administration
Library Payroll and Personnel Services has a manger [sic] and 2.0 FTE classified staff who deal
with payroll and routine personnel recordkeeping.
21
8.
22
20 hours: 0%
Less than 20 hours: 05%
Other, please specify: 07%
14. Are you the primary supervisor for employees, student workers, and/or graduate assistants?
1
Yes, number of
full time employees
36%
21%
21%
4%
7%
0%
0%
0%
0%
Yes, number of
part time employees
78%
22%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
Yes, number of
student workers
50%
33%
17%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
Yes, number of
graduate assistants
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
No, I do not
supervise
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
0%
$30,000
$35,000
$35,000
$40,000
$40,000
$45,000
$45,000
$50,000
Greater than
$50, 000
N/A
HR Management
0%
0%
0%
6%
6%
85%
3%
HR Staff
11%
20%
29%
20%
11%
6%
3%
16. Indicate your educational background and other qualifications (please mark all that apply)
Masters in Library and Information Sciences: 23%
Masters in Human Resource Management: 10%
Undergraduate degree in Human Resource Management: 21%
HR certification or training: 33%
Other, please specify: 54%
Other comments included: MBA, Experience, MA in Economics, BS in History, BS in Education,
PhD in Library and Information Science
17. I have worked as an HR professional for __ years.
1 3: 03%
3 5: 0%
More than 5, but less than 10: 18%
10 15: 15%
15 20: 33%
Over 20: 31%
23
10
Librarians
3%
27%
24%
8%
19%
3%
3%
5%
0%
8%
5%
8%
11%
14%
5%
11%
5%
0%
0%
41%
Administration
52%
17%
0%
9%
9%
9%
0%
4%
0%
0%
Graduate Students
8%
8%
0%
19%
19%
4%
4%
0%
0%
38%
22. Please describe your role in the hiring of professional librarians (faculty). For instance, do you
serve on search committees; oversee ingest of all applications, etc.? ***
Oversee the entire hiring process, however I do not sit on all the search committees
Oversee process, interview logistics, salary negotiations, relocation logistics
I serve ex-officio on all search committees. All applications are directed to me and then shared
with the search committee. All interview schedules, travel arrangements are handled in our
office
23. Please describe your role in professional librarian (faculty) recruitment: ***
I manage the recruitment processes for all library faculty positions. This involves analysis of job
descriptions, coordination of interviews, and placement of job postings. For faculty searches,
I assist search committees, place job advertisements, coordinate scheduling and interviewing logistics, and complete paperwork for various University offices and units including
24
25.
26.
27.
28.
Affirmative Action and Academic Affairs. I ensure compliance with federal and University
regulations and policies, including Affirmative Action guidelines
Place advertisements in appropriate journals, online listservs
All postings are done through our office and all contact with candidates is by our office
24. As a Libraries HR Professional, do you participate in university-wide Faculty recruitment
strategies or strategies for promoting diversity in the workplace? Please specify these activities. ***
No
We work closely with university HR, EEO, and our diversity advisory council in promoting these
strategies
I serve on University committees that participate in forming diversity initiatives
Do you participate in outreach activities to prospective employees (attend fairs, conferences)?
Please include examples of these activities: ***
No our applicant pool is usually very large just by advertising through our University
website
Actively participate in ARL Diversity Initiative conference. We have sponsored and staffed booths
at ACRL conference
Yes, I have traveled to other campuses to recruit new faculty
How often do you conduct HR related sessions and present materials to the Libraries faculty and
staff?
Frequently: 1 time a month or more - 29%
Often: About every three months - 21%
Less often: About every six months - 24%
Infrequently: Once a year - 21%
Never - 05%
If you answered a.-d. in Question 26, please list some topics covered in HR sessions you have
given or sponsored: ***
A general summation of the responses include: diversity training, Fair Labor Standards Act, university personnel policies, behavioral styles in the workplace, safety training, FMLA, sexual
harassment, new employee orientation, and performance appraisals
Beyond the hiring process, what interaction do you have with professional librarians (faculty)?
Check all that apply.
Committee work: 69%
Mentoring or support: 56%
Answer university or general HR questions: 90%
Other, please specify: 28%
Other comments included: Facilitate reviews, Employee relations, FMLA, mediation, Consultant
to Library Administration & all others
Professional development
29. I attend approximately __ number of HR related conferences and workshops per year
1 2: 29%
3 4: 47%
25
None: 11%
Other, please specify: 13%
Other comments included: I attend monthly HR-related luncheon (SHRM chapter),
10+, Monthly meetings of University HR
30. If you answered a or b to the above, please specify how many conferences and workshops are
1
N/A
National or international
33%
14%
5%
0%
0%
0%
48%
State or regional
62%
17%
0%
0%
0%
0%
21%
At my institution
14%
29%
14%
18%
7%
14%
4%
O t h e r,
specify
0%
33%
0%
0%
0%
0%
67%
please
31. I have given professional presentations outside of my Library about HR related issues
Yes: 43%
No: 57%
32. I have published in HR or Library journals about HR related issues.
Yes: 08%
No: 92%
33. I am a member of the following professional societies: ***
SHRM Society for Human Resource Management
LLAMA Library Leadership & Management (a division of the American Library
Association)
ACRL Association of College and Research Libraries
34. Please provide any additional comments related to this survey.***
The demographic numbers I reported on the first screen also include our law, medical and dental
libraries that are treated as a separate entity at my university
Survey question responses pertain only to Main Library
The Center is a not for profit academic library consortium and not part of a university or college.
Hence, I had to respond not applicable to several of the questions
35. Optional information
Thank you for your participation in this survey!
*** For complete responses to qualitative questions please contact the authors.
26
27
Chapter 2
Internships, Residencies,
and Fellowships:
aBstract
Libraries need creative ways to grow a new generation of librarians, specifically middle managers.
The authors profession is not known for training librarians to become managers, either in graduate
school or on the job. Because of this deficiency they find themselves without a succession plan to fill
the forthcoming retirements in upper management that will leave a gap in middle management. This
chapter addresses time-limited appointments such as internships, residencies and fellowships and how
they can prepare recent graduates for more advanced, non-entry level positions. Different skills and
responsibilities can be built into the programs to better prepare new librarians to take on greater, more
dynamic roles in an organization. These types of positions can serve as incubators for library leaders
and enrich the entire profession.
IntrodUctIon
There is no doubt about it we need a succession
plan in libraries. Statistical and anecdotal evidence
shows that the profession is aging and there are not
enough new graduates to fill positions of leadership
and responsibility. In order to become more agile
and flexible, we must be creative in recruiting talent to our organizations and profession. With the
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-601-8.ch002
Copyright 2010, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited.
term, but the special circumstances within libraries require additional attention. Within libraries
there is an insufficient bench of professionals
who can fill middle management or senior level
positions. Couple this with a marked decline of
new incoming talent, and the rising need for succession planning is clear. For this reason, libraries
should begin to establish a growth mentality to
foster the development of skill sets, knowledge
and experience associated with the long term goals
and objectives of the organization.
Much has been made of the new workplace
phenomenon of having four generations in the
workplace. Looking at the demographics there
are: Traditionalists (born 1900 1945), Baby
Boomers (born 1946 1964), Generation Xers
(1965 1980), and Millenials (born 1981 1999)
(Lancaster and Stillman, 2002). Each of these
generations has developed characteristics defined
by their experiences and the world around them.
Libraries are dealing with a unique problem as
many new professionals have chosen librarianship as a second career. Our new library school
graduates are often fifteen to twenty years older
than those in other professions. Baby Boomers
make up a significant portion of the national
workforce and an even more significant portion
of librarians. The same challenge exists in academia since the ivory tower is aging right along
with us. Within the University of North Carolina
system approximately 60% of faculty are Baby
Boomers, 16% are over 61 with only 19% under
40 (Johnson, 2007). Recent surveys of ALA
members show that 55.7% of librarians are Baby
Boomers (ALA, 2008).
How can we address these demographic concerns in planning for succession? There is a need
for more librarians, yes, but the greater need is for
middle managers. The future retirement of Baby
Boomers is going to hit us from the top down, and
the younger librarians have not gained the experience needed to step up. We need to have managers
trickle up into the organization. Libraries that are
willing to train and empower newer librarians can
28
BacKgroUnd
Various types of time-limited opportunities that
can be created include internships, residencies,
and fellowships, all of which offer different components of professional growth and development
(Association of Research Libraries, 1992).
Internships mostly develop library students and
educate them on the duties and responsibilities of
the professional librarian. These are typically parttime positions and may also resemble graduate
assistantships. Introducing these students to areas
of the library, such as technical services, that they
may not know much about may influence what
area of librarianship they pursue. Often there is
more intensive training for these positions versus
the average student employee. Many are trained
on upper level tasks building upon what they are
learning in their library and information science
curriculum.
Residencies are similar to internships but
are full-time professional positions designed
for the post-MLS librarian. These positions are
29
30
extend their professional skill- and experience-base, enabling more effective leadership in a major research library;
engage the major challenges and pressures
currently facing research libraries in concert with some of the top library leaders
who are shaping contemporary responses
to these challenges;
better understand the dynamics and politics of campus life in several of the leading
research libraries of North America;
create a network of colleagues to discuss
and debate the critical issues and current
trends facing research libraries;
explore innovative and entrepreneurial
techniques needed to support the future direction of research libraries; and
develop a clearer understanding of what
it takes to be a successful research library
director.
31
32
Development
In order to gain full advantage of having timelimited appointments and utilize this within your
succession planning activities, their work environment must be supportive. Make a conscious
effort to identify their needs, their added value
and their long term potential. Creating this atmosphere starts with awareness by the total library
organization of their purpose, primary responsibilities and the role in which they will perform.
The entire staff should recognize the benefit of
having the position within the organization and
not view time-limited activities as a burden or
inconvenience. Time-limited employees should
be given the same considerations as regular staff,
such as proper space provided and other tools and
support mechanisms to do their job, opportunities
to participate in group activities, recognition for
their concerns or ideas and orientation into the
organizational culture.
Prior to her move to Syracuse University, Anna
Dahlstein was the Director of External Relations
at North Carolina State University Libraries in
Raleigh, North Carolina and is a former NCSU
Libraries Fellow. Dahlstein holds an M.A. in Library and Information Studies from the University
of Wisconsin-Madison and a B.A. in Government
from Harvard University. The Fellows program
offered a level of variety and a big picture
perspective of academic libraries that would be
difficult to gain from other entry-level positions.
Serving on library-wide committees and projects
and attending conferences allowed me to explore
a range of issues instead of focusing exclusively
on my own specialization in graduate school.
33
34
35
36
conclUsIon
As a profession we have the reputation of being
change and risk averse. In many ways we embrace
change every day, but often not in organizational
design and planning. The field of librarianship
needs to examine new models to recruit and
develop dynamic librarians into the roles we
need for a successful succession plan. We need
to evaluate the way managers are groomed not
10 years of progressive experience required but
intensive management experience in an environment infused with opportunities to network and be
mentored. Much can be gained at your institution
and within the profession by giving new librarians
the opportunity and the tools to advance more
quickly as middle managers. Mentoring is a major
component of such an effort. The librarians who
are graduating now are looking for guidance and
role models (Beggs, 2005).
Management skills and a solid understanding of administrative issues can be gained in the
experiences of interns, residents and fellows.
Plan your program or appointment carefully so
that the organization and the employee are getting the most out of the experience from start to
finish. The entire process of recruiting, hiring,
on-boarding, developing and possibly retaining is one that needs ownership and attention to
detail. Either a single individual needs to be the
coordinator of the effort or work by committee,
but the times that these initiatives fail, it seems
it is because no one has asked the employee for
feedback - positive or negative. It is time to grow
and retain the managers your organization and the
profession will need in the coming years. Taking
the reins on this opportunity will develop diverse
and experienced staff that are able to step into
middle management roles and eventually become
library leaders.
37
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International Journal of Technology and Human
Interaction, 1(3), 114.
Shepstone, C., & Currie, L. (2008). Transforming the academic library: Creating an organizational culture that fosters staff success. Journal
of Academic Librarianship, 34(4), 358368.
doi:10.1016/j.acalib.2008.05.008
39
Specific goals:
40
1)
2)
3)
4)
To what degree do you feel other employees in your department support the Residency/Fellowship
program?
a) Atmosphere was openly supportive.
b) Accepted, but not openly supportive.
c) Generally not accepted or understood.
Comments:
5)
Were the actual duties of the position commensurate with the job description?
a) Experience closely matches that offered.
b) Experience mostly matches that offered.
c) Little relationship exists.
d) Extremely unsatisfactory (please comment).
Comments:
6)
41
c)
Comments:
7)
8)
9)
10) Evaluate your supervisors receptiveness to new ideas you might have had.
a) Exceeded expectations.
b) Met expectations.
c) Less than expected.
Comments:
11) How would you rate your relationship with your supervisor?
a) Exceeded expectations.
b) Met expectations.
c) Less than expected.
Comments:
What changes, if any, would you recommend? (Attach a separate sheet if necessary.)
Librarians Signature _______________________________________
42
Date: ________________
Date: ________________
Date: ________________
Please indicate your appraisal using the following scale: 1 = Excellent; 2 = Good.
____ Understands job responsibilities
Comments:
____ Accepts direction
Comments:
____ Learns quickly
Comments:
____ Motivated
Comments:
43
Areas of development:
44
Date: _____________
Date: _____________
Date: _____________
Observation Skills
Assertiveness Skills
Coaching Skills
Demonstration of skills
Allow practice and discussion
Observe use of skills
Positively reinforce actions
Provide feedback for improvement
Feedback Skills
Informal
Needs to be two way
Should occur immediately
Keep it positive
Keep it relative
Keep it simple
Dont overwhelm
Assessment Skills
Program goals
Personal objectives
Adjust from feedback
Constructive
Relevant to need
Encouraging next steps
Motivation Skills
45
46
Chapter 3
aBstract
In the state of Nebraska, where the population is 90% white, recruiting people of color to the University
of Nebraska-Lincoln is challenging. Needless to say, intentional efforts are made to recruit and retain
librarians and other information professionals. University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries has brought
together a team of librarians to focus on one of the universitys core values--diversity. This team of
librarians from public services, technical services and library administration share responsibility in
planning and implementing the Libraries diversity initiatives. This chapter will discuss the recruitment
and retention efforts of the Libraries and the evolution of the team that has increased the number of
librarians from underrepresented populations at University of Nebraska-Lincoln from 2.6% in 1999 to
12.2% in 2009.
IntrodUctIon
The Cornhusker State is traditionally known for
football and agriculture and many would not associate ethnic minorities with the state. Because
Nebraskas population is 90% white, according
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-601-8.ch003
Copyright 2010, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited.
% of Total Faculty
1999-00
38
2.6%
2000-01
39
5.1%
2001-02
42
4.8%
2002-03
40
5.0%
2003-04
39
5.1%
2004-05
44
4.5%
2005-06
49
6.1%
2006-07
49
6.1%
2007-08
49
8.2%
2008-09
49
12.2%
47
2.
3.
4.
5.
48
literature review
The Association of Research Libraries (ARL)
SPEC Kit titled Minority Recruitment and Retention in ARL Libraries authored by Burrows,
Jennings, and Welch (1990) surveyed ARL libraries about whether the libraries offer a program(s)
that support ethnic/cultural sensitivity; of the 45
libraries that responded, only 9 libraries answered
yes to the question (p.1). Although this question
has not been reexamined in nearly two decades,
there appears to be an increase of diversity committees in academic libraries. Therefore, if this
question were asked today, the answers would
reveal that an overwhelming majority of libraries are involved in creating a diversity plan and
programming. Although there have been many
initiatives, reports, and proposals over the years,
there was a substantial increase in literature about
diversity in libraries in general and in academic
libraries specifically in the 80s and 90s. The issue
of diversity continues to come to the forefront due
to the predicted national demographic changes,
the graying of the library profession, and libraries desire to reflect the diverse communities
they serve.
Numerous articles and book chapters highlight
the key ALA task forces, reports, and programs
that exist today and provide a venue for underrepresented voices in the profession. All of these
initiatives could not have come together without
the persistence and support of the ethnic caucuses,
as well as the financial support of the ARL and
the Institute for Museum and Library Services
(IMLS). In the 1980s, key reports and task forces
were created and included resolutions to prohibit
library associations from discriminating against
minority membership in state organizations, such
as the Committee on Minority Concerns, the National Commission on Libraries and Information
Sciences, and the ALA Equity at Issue: Library
Services to the Nations for our Major Minority
Groups. The outgrowth of these efforts has led
to:
As national diversity initiatives have developed, the issues such as recruitment and retention
of minority librarians has become crucial to sustain such programs. Recruitment of professionals
from underrepresented groups initially included
mentoring, building relationships with minority
librarians, and diversity education. In the late
1990s, a number of programs were created to
recruit and retain minority librarians. Programs
such as Knowledge River at the University of
Arizona, the ARL Initiative to Recruit a Diverse
Workforce, OCLC Diversity Fellows, and the ALA
Spectrum Scholar Program provided minority
students the opportunity to attend library school,
therefore increased the diverse applicant pools
from which institutions could recruit. Along with
these programs came a number of LISTSERVS
and online lists, such as the Diversity Librarians
Network, created to reach this new cohort of
minority librarians.
recruitment overview
Examining the image of librarians, funding
resources, and marketing continues to be at the
core of recruitment efforts. An ACRL Ad-Hoc
Task Force on Recruitment and Retention Issues
commissioned a study in 2002, Recruitment, Retention, and Restructuring: Human Resources in
Academic Libraries: A White Paper, cited these
same issues. Recruitment was found to be vital to
the organization as the number of MLIS students
is decreasing, retirements are expected to increase,
and the image of the profession is not attractive to
younger generations. This White Paper included
several recommendations for the ALA and other
invested associations.
49
50
Infrastructure: Building a
foundation for diversity
Initiatives at Unl libraries
Since the late 1990s, there has been a resurgence
of diversity efforts within the library profession.
These efforts led to the first ARL Diversity in
Libraries conference in 2000 and the first Joint
Conference for Librarians of Color (JCLC) held
in 2006 and organized by the five ALA Ethnic
Caucuses. These conferences highlighted the
numerous diversity programs, services, and positions in public and academic libraries. The conferences also provided models for UNL Libraries to
conceptualize a diversity focus through positions
and initiatives. Based on the conferences and library literature, libraries have chosen to manage
diversity initiatives with a variety of diversity
focused positions and groups. Since 2003, UNL
Libraries established its own diversity initiatives
which continue to evolve (Figure 1).
Initially, UNL Libraries created a Diversity
Librarian position to focus on diversity in the
organization. One of the main challenges in the
creation of this position was the job description.
Job descriptions for diversity positions tend to be
overwhelming and often involve a workload of
multiple positions. There has been the tendency to
51
52
53
54
55
college attendees as well as partnering to coordinate and sponsor programs with the department
of Residence Life and Womens Center.
Other external factors have had a great impact
upon the team members professional development. The existence of the ethnic caucuses associated with the American Library Associations
and the ARL Diversity in Libraries conferences
provide leadership and networking opportunities.
The conferences, in particular, provided forums
for exchanging ideas for implementing diversity
and multicultural services at the local institutions.
More importantly, the retention of librarians with
faculty status centers on the progression towards
tenure, which means having the institutions support to do research, and opportunities for professional development on campus and in professional
organizations at the state and national level.
56
conclUsIon
Diversity is an ever-evolving process at the UNL
libraries and in academic libraries that requires
constant attention and administrative commitment
to guarantee its survival. The ability to learn,
change, and grow in the profession benefits individuals, libraries and the profession as a whole.
57
references
Acree, E. K., Epps, S. K., Gilmore, Y., & Henriques, C. (2001). Using professional development
as a retention tool for underrepresented academic
librarians. Journal of Library Administration,
33(1/2), 45. doi:10.1300/J111v33n01_05
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Howland, J. (1999). Beyond recruitment: Retention and promotion strategies to ensure diversity
and success. Library Administration & Management, 13(1), 4-13. Retrieved from http://
search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&
db=lxh&AN=ISTA3400595&loginpage=login.
asp&site=ehost-live
Kreitz, P. (2008). Best practices for managing
organizational diversity. Journal of Academic
Librarianship, 34(2), 101-120. Retrieved from
http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=
true&db=lxh&AN=31603788&loginpage=logi
n.asp&site=ehost-live
Lincoln (Neb.) Board of Education. (2008). Lincoln public schools annual report, 2007-2008.
Lincoln Public Schools Community News, 1-8.
Musser, L. R. (2002). Effective retention strategies for diverse employees. In T. Y. Neely, &
K. Lee-Smeltzer (Eds.), Diversity now: People,
collections, and services in academic libraries:
Selected papers from the big 12 plus libraries
consortium diversity conference (pp. 63-72). New
York: Haworth Information Press.
Perlman, H. (n.d.). UNL | state of the university
address2008- page 3. Retrieved February 15,
2009, from http://www.unl.edu/ucomm/chancllr/
sua2008/sua2008_4.shtml
Senge, P. M. (2006). The fifth discipline: The art
and practice of the learning organization. New
York: Doubleday/Currency.
Smith, D. G., Turner, C. S., Osei-Kofi, N., &
Richards, S. (2004, March/April). Interrupting
the usual: Successful strategies for hiring diverse
faculty. The Journal of Higher Education, 75(2),
133. doi:10.1353/jhe.2004.0006
University of Nebraska-Lincoln. (2008). Indicators of Institutional Quality: Annual Report 20072008. Lincoln, NE: The Board of Regents of the
University of Nebraska. Retrieved from http://
www.unl.edu/svcaa/documents/2007-08%20
QI%20Report,%20Final.pdf
University of Nebraska-Lincoln. (n.d.). A Strategic
Plan for UNL: Setting our Compass. Retrieved
2/15/2009, 2009, from http://www.unl.edu/
ucomm/chancllr/compass/vision.shtml
University of Nebraska-Lincoln. (n.d.). A Strategic
Plan for UNL: Setting our Compass. Appendix B.
Retrieved February 15, 2009, from http://www.
unl.edu/ucomm/chancllr/compass/appendixb.
shtml
University of Nebraska-Lincoln University Libraries. (2008). ACRL excellence in academic libraries
award application. Unpublished manuscript.
addItIonal readIng
American Library Association. (2006). Bridging
boundaries to create a new workforce: A survey
of spectrum scholarship recipients, 1998-2003.
Arist, S. (2007). Success in diversity: How three
Illinois libraries embrace multiculturalism. ILA
Reporter, 25(5), 4-7. Retrieved from http://0search.ebscohost.com.library.unl.edu/login.aspx
?direct=true&db=lxh&AN=26914594&loginpa
ge=login.asp&site=ehost-live
Association of American Colleges and Universities. DiversityWeb - A resource hub for higher
education. Retrieved 2/15/2009, 2009, from http://
www.diversityweb.org/
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Best practices in diversity planning and assessment.(2007). ASHE Higher Education Report,
33(1), 89-102. Retrieved from http://0-search.
ebscohost.com.library.unl.edu/login.aspx?direc
t=true&db=aph&AN=25793682&loginpage=lo
gin.asp&site=ehost-live
Black, W., & Leysen, J. (2002). Fostering success: Socialization of entry-level librarians in
ARL libraries. Journal of Library Administration, 36(4), 3. Retrieved from http://0-search.
ebscohost.com.library.unl.edu/login.aspx?direct
=true&db=lxh&AN=9313369&loginpage=logi
n.asp&site=ehost-live
Bonnette, A. (2004). Mentoring minority librarians up the career ladder. Library Administration
& Management, 18(3), 134-139. Retrieved from
http://0-search.ebscohost.com.library.unl.edu/
login.aspx?direct=true&db=lxh&AN=1333579
1&loginpage=login.asp&site=ehost-live
Cogell, R. V., Gruwell, C. A., & Josey, E. J. (2001).
Diversity in libraries: Academic residency programs. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
Curry, D. A., Blandy, S. G., & Martin, L. M. (1994).
Racial and ethnic diversity in academic libraries:
Multicultural issues. New York: Haworth Press.
Darby, L. (2005). Abolishing stereotypes: Recruitment and retention of minorities in the library
profession. Rural Libraries, 25(1), 7-17. Retrieved
from http://0-search.ebscohost.com.library.unl.
edu/login.aspx?direct=true&db=lxh&AN=1688
6786&loginpage=login.asp&site=ehost-live
Dewey, B. I., & Keally, J. (2008). Recruiting
for diversity: Strategies for twenty-first century
research librarianship. Library Hi Tech, 26(4),
622629. doi:10.1108/07378830810920941
Dewey, B. I., & Parham, L. (2006). Achieving
diversity: A how-to-do-it manual for librarians.
New York: Neal-Schuman Publishers.
60
Musser, L. R. (2002). Effective retention strategies for diverse employees. In T. Y. Neely, & K.
(. Lee-Smeltzer (Eds.), Diversity now: People,
collections, and services in academic libraries:
Selected papers from the big 12 plus libraries
consortium diversity conference (pp. 63-72).
New York: Haworth Information Press. Association of College and Research Libraries Board of
Directors Diversity Taskforce. (2007). Achieving
racial and ethnic diversity among academic and
research librarians: The recruitment, retention,
and advancement of librarians of color: A white
paper. Chicago: Association of College and Research Libraries.
Neely, T. Y., & Beard, M. K. (2008). Recruiting
and retaining academic research librarians: PostMLS residency programs. College & Research
Libraries News, 69(6), 314-315. Retrieved from
http://0-vnweb.hwwilsonweb.com.library.unl.
edu/hww/jumpstart.jhtml?recid=0bc05f7a67b1
790e7c05296fd14089abad0037f41c46c9bbfe83
8981eb4c250778e0ff0563e56209&fmt=H. PDF:
http://0-vnweb.hwwilsonweb.com.library.unl.
edu/hww/jumpstart.jhtml?recid=0bc05f7a67b1
790e7c05296fd14089abad0037f41c46c9bbfe83
8981eb4c250778e0ff0563e56209&fmt=P
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62
Chapter 4
aBstract
Recruitment initiatives at San Jos State University date back over a decade. SJSU and local librarians
and faculty from the School of Library and Information Science and local libraries have been partnering
with professional organizations by sponsoring recruitment fairs, ice cream socials and other gatherings at SJSU and in the broader communities to recruit individuals to attend library school. This paper
provides a review of the literature regarding recruitment and retention of students of color in library
schools. Also included is a review of the factors that lead to the decision to become a librarian. It provides
a description of the IMLS Librarians for Tomorrow Program at San Jos State University. Challenges
and recommendations for future study followed.
IntrodUctIon
Recruitment initiatives at San Jos State University
date back over a decade. Librarians from San Jos
State University (SJSU), San Jos Public Library
(SJPL) and other local librarians and faculty from
the School of Library and Information Science
(SLIS) have partnered with professional organizaDOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-601-8.ch004
Copyright 2010, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited.
literature review
The Role of Libraries in
the Digital Divide
Accessibility to technology and information has
increased for many people across the United States
especially as new technologies are adopted by
many of the younger generations. Daily there are
examples of this growth as people use their cell
phones or laptops to tweet, send instant messages
to friends and family, check Facebook accounts,
and play with their iPhone applications.
Access to and use of these new technologies
represents a positive step towards filling the
digital divide gap of the haves and have-nots
as reported in the National Telecommunication
& Information Administrations profile, Falling
through the Net (1995). However, almost fifteen
years later, some populations such as Latinos,
African Americans and Native Americans experience the digital divide more than Whites and
Diversity
Does diversity matter? Recruiting and retaining
library school students from underrepresented
groups has been a challenge for the profession
for decades. The lack of diversity is an especially
important issue in light of the upcoming shortage
of librarians and changing demographic trends.
Howland (1999) stated that, at the heart of the
issue of building a more inclusive profession, however, is the retention and promotion of librarians
63
64
Changing Demographics
According to a 2004 report by the Association
for Library and Information Science Education,
In the United States, minority populations are
projected to reach 47% of the nations population by 2050. In contrast, schools of library and
information science (LIS) report that only 11.2%
of their students are from minority populations.
Three years later, this imbalance hasnt improved
much as Kim & Sin (2007) reported, In the LIS
field, --- minority groups constitute only 10 to 12
percent of the LIS student and librarian populations --- the proportions of ethnic minorities in
LIS student and librarian populations remain
significantly lower than in the U.S. population
(p. 534).
The recent ALA study, Diversity Counts (2007)
places this within a library context, noting that
one of the most crucial issues facing the library
profession is the lack of diversity among holders
of MLIS degrees. The challenge lies not in the
lack of diversity among library staff, but more
generally in the lack of diversity among holders
of masters degrees (Lance, 2005). Diversity in
staffing emerged as an important issue during the
past few years, along with the need for libraries
to reflect the communities they serve (Jordan et
al., 2006, p. 56).
An earlier study by Espinal (2003) reported
that, For every 9,177 Latinos, there is one Latino
librarian, as opposed to one white, non-Latino
librarian for every 1,830 white non-Latinos (p.
19). With the growing number of Latino/Chicano
populations in major metropolitan areas, the need
to recruit librarians of color is an urgent call.
Background
History & Demographics: San
Jos, California and San Jos
State University (SJSU)
El Pueblo de San Jos de Guadalupe was founded
on November 29, 1777 as the first town in the
Spanish colony of Nueva California. The city of
San Jos was incorporated in 1850 and it served
as the first capital for the State of California. San
Jos is the third-largest city in California, and
the tenth-largest in the United States. San Jos
is located at the southern end of the Bay Area, a
region commonly referred to as Silicon Valley,
65
66
67
Spanish press, campus student newspapers, intralibrary announcements and electronic listservs.
Recruitment programs have taken place at San
Jos State University and at other libraries in the
greater Bay Area.
The cumulative direction of these outreach
activities encouraged SJSU, SJPL, and other community partners to expand the already on-going
recruitment activities by submitting a proposal to
the Laura Bush 21st Century Library Program for
a pilot project to recruit students of color to attend
the San Jos State University School of Library
and Information Science. Several of the librarians
who participated in the recruitment activities were
consulted during the proposal process and later
were invited as mentors to the new Librarians for
Tomorrow students.
68
workshop, Strategies for Success in Librarianship: Trends & Issues, focused students attention on strategies they can use to succeed in an
online learning environment. (See Appendix C
for workshop highlights.)
Curricular Offerings/Courses
A specially modified curriculum was designed
to enhance students understanding of service to
diverse communities and leadership in cultural
communities. Students will complete three required electives that focus on the information needs
of diverse communities, leadership development,
and the digital divide. They are as follows:
1.
2.
3.
69
70
Leadership Development
Leadership development opportunities are also
supported throughout the program. Through unit
tours, presentations, and discussions with the comanagers and senior administrators of the joint
city-university King Library, students will be
introduced to public and academic librarianship
within the context of a complex communication, decision making, and planning organization.
These insights will be supplemented by tours of
selected public library branch facilities and discussions with branch managers who will provide
students with a broad overview on the diversity
of Silicon Valley library services. Students will
attend professional association conferences with
their mentors, who will coach them on professional development and professional networking
experiences.
Leadership skills will be further cultivated
through participation in leadership development
seminars that focus on critical issues to individuals
from underserved groups. To date three leadership development seminars have been offered.
This includes workshops on Mentee/Mentor
Partnerships and Strategies for Success in Librarianship: Trends & Issues (Tarin, 2008) and a
presentation on Getting Involved: Participation
in Professional Organizations and Opportunities
for Leadership (Wong, 2008).
Program Challenges
Financial pressure is another challenge. Tuition
and fees increased more than 25% between the
time the grant was written and when the students
began the SLIS program. The shortfall in funding
was a significant obstacle to the initial success of
the program. There is an expected 10% increase
in fees projected for the Fall 2009 semester for
the CSU system.
fUtUre dIrectIons
Much has been written on why students of color
chose librarianship as a profession after they have
been accepted to the LIS program. Significant
literature has been devoted on how to retain students of color in the program and how to retain
and promote them as working professionals. Yet,
very little research has been devoted on how to
recruit students of color to LIS programs. Todaro
(2007) suggests:
71
72
conclUsIon
The American Library Association and other
professional associations have taken great strides
to enhance the recruitment of persons of color to
the profession. Long term initiatives by ALAs
Spectrum Scholars and the IMLS/Laura Bush 21st
Century Librarian are beginning to bring about
changes in the demographics of our library schools
and in the workforce. Today there are numerous
IMLS funded programs in place in library schools
and library consortia throughout the nation. SLIS
at SJSU has been actively recruiting students of
color to the program as reflected in the most recent
data, which shows 45% of the student populations
are non-white (See Appendix B). One challenge
that remains as library schools increasingly focus
on distance education is how will we be able
to recruit and retain students in these programs
where there is no social support and connection
between students and their instructors? What can
be done to enhance success in classes connected
by the Internet?
Longitudinal research on the success of students who received support from the Spectrum
Scholar and other IMLS funded programs like
Librarians for Tomorrow is needed. Although the
student demographics at SJSUs SLIS program
references
Adkins, D., & Espinal, I. (2004, April 15). The
diversity mandate. Library Journal, 129(7),
5254.
73
Dewey, B. (2006). Achieving Diversity: a Howto-Do-it Manual for Librarians. New York: NeilSchuman Publishers.
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Lance, K. C. (2005, May). Racial and ethnic diversity of U.S. library workers. American Libraries,
36(5), 4143.
Latinos and public library perceptions. (2008,
September). WebJunction Report. Thomas Rivera
Policy Institute.
Lynch, M. J., Tordello, S., & Godfrey, T. (2005).
Retirement and recruitment: a deeper look. [See
also: http://www.ala.org/ala/ors/reports/reports.
htm]. American Libraries, 36(1), 26.
Minority Business Development Agency. (1999,
December). Dynamic Diversity: Projected Changes in U.S. Race and Ethnic Composition 1995 to
2050. Retrieved February 1, 2009 from http://
www.mbda.gov/documents/unpubtext.pdf
Neely, T., & Peterson, L. (2007, July). Achieving
Racial and Ethnic Diversity Among Academic and
Research Librarians: The Recruitment, Retention,
and Advancement of Librarians of Color: a White
Paper. ACRL Board of Directors Diversity Task
Force. Retrieved February 1, 2007 from http://
www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/publications/
whitepapers/ACRL_AchievingRacial.pdf
Paul, J. (2008, September). Librarians for Tomorrow: Reaching out to our Future. Unpublished
REFORMA III Conference Presentation, El Paso,
Texas.
Pribesh, S., Dickinson, G. K., & Bucher, K. L.
(2006). A Comparison of online and face-toface cohorts in a school library media specialist
graduate program: a preliminary study. Journal of
Education for Library and Information Science,
47(4), 33023.
Public Libraries. (2006). Recruitment and retention issue. 45(1), 9-63.
75
addItIonal readIng
Balderrama, S., & et al. (2000, Summer). This
trend called diversity. Library Trends, 49(1), 194.
The entire issue. Retrieved February 1, 2009, from
Academic Search Premier database.
Cogell, R. V., & Gruwell, C. A. (2001). Diversity
in Libraries: Academic Residency Programs.
Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2001.
76
Josey, E. J. (1998). Students in library and information science. In L. Roy & B. E. Sheldon (Ed.),
Library and Information Studies Education in
the United States (pp. 49-64). Washington, D.C.:
Mansell.
Kaufman, P. T. (2002). Where do the next we
come from? Recruiting, retaining, and developing our successors . ARL: a Bimonthly Report on
Research Library Issues and Actions, 221, 15.
Kuntz, P. S. (2003). The Training of an Africana
librarian: The Mellon fellowship. Journal of
Education for Library and Information Science,
44(3/4), 316331.
Love, E. (2009). A Simple step: integrating
library reference and instruction into previously established academic programs for
minority students. [from Wilson Library Lit
& Inf Full Text database.]. The Reference Librarian, 50(1), 413. Retrieved May 12, 2009.
doi:10.1080/02763870802546357
McCook, K., & Lippincott, K. (1997). Planning
for a diverse workforce in library and information
science professions. Rev. ed. Tampa, Fla.: University of South Florida, School of Library and
Information Science, Research Group, Library
and Information Science Education, 385-95.
Minority Business Development Agency. (1999).
Dynamic Diversity: Projected Changes in U.S.
Neely, T. Y. (2005). Minority student recruitment
in LIS education: New profiles for success. In M.
B. Wheeler (Ed.), Unfinished Business: Race,
Equity, and Diversity in Library and Information
Science Education (pp. 93-117). Lanham, MD:
Scarecrow.
Overall, P. (2009). Cultural competence: A
Conceptual framework for library information
science professionals. [from Wilson Library Lit
& Inf Full Text database.]. The Library Quarterly, 79(2), 175204. Retrieved May 12, 2009.
doi:10.1086/597080
77
78
aPPendIX a
librarians for tomorrow Program timelines
Phase 1 - Recruitment
Recruit Students Publicize opportunity and recruit students
Brochures and flyers were distributed on the SJSU campus, SJPL Branch Libraries and at
National Hispanic University. Flyers and announcements were posted on professional, ethnic
and cultural listservs, email and press distribution venues. Recruitment was also conducted
via one-on-one interactions.
Enroll students Screen applicants and select participants
All of the applicants that had complete application packets were interviewed via telephone.
The applicants were ranked and the ranking was reviewed by members of the Advisory
Committee. Alternates were selected in the event that finalists declined to participate in the
program.
Confirm participation with selected students, including execution of participation agreements
Letters were sent to all of the applicants in February 2008 (the fifteen persons selected, the
alternates and persons not selected). The finalists were requested to provide brief biographical
statements and digital photographs for in-house promotional planning.
The IMLS/Librarians for Tomorrow Advisory Committee met in March to review the applicants and to review plans for activities for Fall 08.
Model building Identify program elements:
Program plan, learning outcomes, learning assessment methods, program evaluation approaches, and construct iterative continuous improvement process.
The Librarians for Tomorrow Advisory Committee, mentors, consultants and students addressed
individual, academic, lifelong professional and Librarians for Tomorrow Program success
at Advisory Board Meetings, orientation sessions and in one-on-one sessions between mentors and students.
Assign Mentors Invite applications and select mentors, orient mentors to their role and responsibilities. Mentors and mentees participate in leadership workshop on roles and expectations.
Year 1 Activity Development Design and develop special activities to be offered during Year 1 of
MLIS program, including leadership seminars, student networking events, conference participation,
and library branch tours.
79
aPPendIX B
student demographics at school of library and Information
science, san Jos state University, 2007-2008 academic year
Table 1. Total enrollment by ethnic origin in Fall 2008
80
Ethnic
origin
AI
AP
NA
Total nonwhite
TOTAL
Male
50
57
82
240
204
444
Female
16
158
55
146
27
287
857
689
1546
Ethnic
origin
AI
AP
NA
Total nonwhite
TOTAL
Grand
Total
17
208
225
203
35
369
1097
893
1990
By %
0.85%
10.45%
11.31%
10.20%
1.76%
18.54%
55.13%
44.87%
AI
AP
NA
Total nonwhite
TOTAL
Male
12
12
25
52
50
102
Female
37
11
29
61
201
140
341
443
Grand Total
49
50
41
86
253
190
By %
0.23%
11.06%
11.29%
9.26%
0.45%
19.41%
57.11%
42.89%
aPPendIX c
excerpts from Patricia tarins workshops (permission to use, 2009, february)
Strategies for Success in Librarianship: Trends & Issues Workshop:
81
How many units will you be taking? Will you be working more than 20 hours per week and taking
8 units? If so, how will you manage your time?
How are you going to stay connected in the virtual classroom?
It is important to know when courses are offered. Do you know when the ones you need to graduate will be offered? How often are the courses repeated?
It is important to know deadline dates, requirements for graduation, requirements for applying to
do the E-portfolio, etc. well in advance. Learn the requirements of your program and avoid not
graduating on time.
Topics from the Mentee/Mentor Partnerships Workshop include:
82
The mentor/mentee relationship is a partnership that, first and foremost, requires trust between
participants. In order to have a healthy mentor/mentee relationship the partners must be able to
communicate openly and have a clear understanding of what the goals of their relationship will be.
Although many of these relationships can end up as friendships that last a lifetime, it is important
to understand that many will also run their course and the partners may move on. This does not
mean that the relationship was not useful and productive.
Qualities that are important in healthy mentor/mentee partnerships include: honesty, being able to
be discreet, being knowledgeable, commitment to the relationship in terms of honoring meeting
times and communicating regularly, being open and accessible.
Mentoring is establishing a legacy for the mentor. It is leaving something behind and encourages sharing what was so freely given to you Mentors may serve as guide, counselor, advocate
and protector. Being a mentor helps establish your professional identity and reasserts your role as
a contributing member of your organization. It connotes a value to others, service commitment,
etc. in terms of working to help the next generation of leaders.
Being a good mentor is all about one person taking an interest in another person
A good mentor should offer constructive criticism and coaching. It is important to learn to give
and accept constructive criticism.
Trust comes from mutual respect and the willingness to listen and learn by both the mentor and
the mentee.
83
Chapter 5
Recruitment of Subject
Specialists to Academic
Librarianship
Charlene Kellsey
University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
Stephanie Alexander
University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
James P. Ascher
University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
Matthew Brower
University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
aBstract
Library faculty at the University of Colorado at Boulder developed a fellowship program for current
graduate students to provide them with a work experience in an academic library. Under the mentorship
of a library faculty member, they completed meaningful projects, often using their language or subject
expertise, while exploring career possibilities in librarianship. The goal was to introduce academic subject specialists to a career in academic librarianship as a viable career option. Based on the results of a
follow-up survey the program was quite successful. The survey indicates that over half of the respondents
are considering working in an academic library, and over half are attending or have graduated from a
library science graduate program.
IntrodUctIon
Concerns have been expressed in library literature
for a number of years about the increasing number
of retirements of practicing librarians and what
this implies for libraries of all types. Academic
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-601-8.ch005
Copyright 2010, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited.
84
D.
Understands the significance of original artifacts and the nature and value of primary
materials for learning, teaching, research
and outreach.
Develops and maintains foreign language
competencies appropriate to the repositorys collections and needs of researchers.
85
86
elements of a recruitment
fellowship Program
funding
The initial funding from the Provost provided the
impetus for the Recruitment Committee to develop
criteria for awarding the fellowships, discuss possible projects, and recruit faculty mentors. The
Provost funded four fellowships for three cycles
over two years, but the funding was intended to
develop the program, not to sustain it. In the latest two cycles of fellowships, funding has been
secured from additional sources such as the GTP,
Friends of the Library, and a grant.
The history of funding for the Provosts
Fellowship Program illustrates the need for a
number of sources of financial support to ensure
continuation of the program. Funds from campus
offices and grants are often money without a long
term commitment; those developing a program
such as this need to seek funding periodically if
the program is to continue and have the desired
impact on recruitment to the profession. In CUs
case, the funding so far has been from internal
sources, since those sources are most accessible
and require less time to manage, but grants from
outside sources are also a possibility. The federal
Institute for Museum and Library Services (IMLS)
began an initiative in 2003 focused on recruitment
of librarians (IMLS, 2006); other sources might
be open to a grant application for a recruitment
program such as the one at CU.
87
88
selection criteria
Interest
in
exploring
academic
librarianship
Subject expertise, particularly in a foreign
language
An outstanding academic record
Compatibility with a mentor
Time availability to complete the required
hours
productive and successful relationship. The committee also preferred candidates with language
expertise, because there are numerous projects
within the libraries that require knowledge of a
given language.
The Provosts Fellowship Program began
with the intent to provide graduate students with
exposure to faculty tenure track positions within
libraries. Some candidates may be interested
because librarianship allows them to pursue a
tenure track faculty position related to their field
of study without completing a doctoral program.
These candidates may already be familiar with
research and publishing; however, they may be
unfamiliar with the role of librarians within the
university. The fellowship allows such candidates
to gain practical insight into the daily work of a
faculty librarian.
There are also candidates who have worked in
the library as student assistants and therefore are
familiar with the operations and workflow. Yet,
they may never have worked under the guidance
of a library faculty member. The Provosts Fellowship Program is valuable to these candidates
since it helps them gain insight into how faculty
librarians perform research through their work in
the library. While previous library experience is
not necessary for a successful fellowship, it does
demonstrate a fellows interest in working at an
academic library.
The Recruitment Committee uses the application process to be sure a candidate will be able to
meet the time requirements and benefit fully from
the Provosts Fellowship Program. Because the
committee is fortunate to be able to choose from
a pool of highly motivated and talented people,
there are often more qualified candidates than
available fellow positions. It is important to be
sure that those who are selected will be able to
meet the requirements of the program because, in
addition to the hours spent working on projects
with mentors, the fellows must also attend GTP
workshops and make site visits.
application development
The application documents should concisely address the goals and criteria of the fellowship. After
the development of the criteria and goals of the
Provosts Fellowship Program, the Recruitment
Committee creates an application questionnaire.
The application questions should elicit a response
that allows the committee to evaluate candidates
based on the criteria set forth. For instance, the
committee needs to be able to evaluate the candidates ability to complete the required hours.
Rather than asking the candidates if they felt they
were able to complete the hours, it was determined
that the application needed to have a section where
the candidates listed other campus appointments
they were currently fulfilling. This knowledge
allowed the committee to enquire further in the
interview about each candidates ability to meet
the required number of hours for the fellowship. If
any part of a candidates application is unclear it
is always possible to follow up in the interview.
89
90
selection Process
Interview
Once the Recruitment Committee determines
which candidates to interview, interview questions should be developed. These questions can
focus on the candidates field of study, subject
knowledge, and openness to exploring librarianship. These questions not only provide more
insight into the potential projects a fellow would
be able to work on, but also allow the committee
to judge the fellows commitment to pursuing
librarianship. For example, one year candidates
were all asked where they saw themselves in
five years. If the candidate stated that they would
be pursuing an MLS or working in a library, it
suggested that the candidate was knowledgeable
about the education of information professionals
and interested in pursuing it. Even though this
question is basic and open ended, it provides the
candidates with the opportunity to show their level
of interest in pursuing a career as an information
professional.
Interviews generally last about twenty to thirty
minutes, and the format consists of a structured
question and answer session, followed by the candidates questions for the Recruitment Committee
and any follow up questions the committee had for
the candidate. Throughout the interview process, it
is important to be aware of library faculty mentors
that could be paired with potential fellows. After
the committee has had a chance to determine which
candidates to interview, the committee should
share the candidates application materials with
library faculty who may be interested in mentoring a fellow. Ultimately they are the best people
to determine whether or not a good mentoring
relationship can be formed, and their feedback
can make the selection process easier.
Mentors
91
92
developing Projects
93
Fellowship Projects
Comparative Literature
Subject guide
English Literature
Philosophy
Religious Studies
Religious Studies
Art History
Comparative Literature
French
Linguistics
Anthropology, Sociology,
Journalism
Geography
Government Publications
Library
Cataloging project
Anthropology
Chemistry, Biochemistry
Science Library
Grant development
Musicology
Music
Music Library
Subject guide
Communication
Government Publications
Library
Cataloging project
English
Linguistics
Philosophy
Classics
Acquisitions Department,
Research and Instruction Department
Subject guide
Note: The mentors subject areas reflect their bibliographic responsibilities, in addition to their departmental responsibilities noted in the
third column.
94
Library-wide activities
Committee-organized activities
Graduate Teacher Program (GTP) activities
library-wide activities
In addition to working on projects developed
with their mentor, the fellows have the option
of becoming involved in other library activities
as their interest dictates. Mentors were strongly
encouraged to have their fellow attend librarywide meetings. These meetings expose the fellows
to the issues that engage the library as a whole.
Mentors often explain the topics brought up during these meetings to their fellows, since many
of the topics will not be clear to someone who
is unfamiliar with the library. This interchange
between fellow and mentor provides the fellow
with a deeper understanding of the library-wide,
broader issues as well as the day-to-day activities
that go on in an academic library.
The fellows also have opportunity to attend
periodic workshops hosted by the CU Libraries.
Throughout the year, the Faculty-Staff Development Committee (FSDC) presents a series of
lectures and workshops. The charge of the FSDC
is to foster career development in order to attract
and retain competent and motivated personnel.
A fellow can benefit from attending any of the
workshops which provide exposure to librarianship outside of their mentors role, awareness of
research conducted within the Libraries, perspectives from outside of the CU library environment, and a broader understanding of academic
librarianship.
Many fellows also find attending presentations given by job candidates beneficial for their
development. By attending job talks, the fellow
can observe the process of selecting a faculty
candidate. This observation helps the fellow to
identify common interviewing mistakes and makes
the academic library hiring process clearer. In addition to the content of the job presentation itself,
the types of questions that librarians ask and the
responses given inform the fellows understanding of the hiring process. Experiencing these job
presentations as an audience member demystifies
the experience and can be useful if they decide
committee-organized activities
Since the Provosts Fellowship Program began
in 2005, the Recruitment Committee has increasingly hosted activities that bring the fellows
together as a group, and exposed the fellows
to career opportunities for academic librarians.
The committee developed brown bag lunches to
encourage camaraderie among the fellows and to
discuss various library personnel, departments,
and issues in a relaxed atmosphere. The most
recent series of brown bag lunches included a
discussion of the differences between academic
and public librarianship, a workshop on creating
a curriculum vitae (CV) and cover letter, a discussion of library science programs (which included
CU Libraries personnel who are in different
stages of attending a library graduate program),
a meeting with the Dean of Libraries, and open
discussion. Other topics considered by the committee include a meeting with the CU Libraries
Tenure Committee, presentations from various
departments on the work that goes on in those
areas, and a workshop on developing a Socratic
Portfolio. These informal gatherings allow the
fellows to meet librarians outside of the department in which they are working. The gatherings
also bring the fellows together as a peer group to
share their experiences with each other.
In addition to the brown bag series, the Recruitment Committee has formalized the larger
events that the fellows have attended in the past
(such as a tour of campus branch libraries, or a
tour of the librarys offsite storage facility) into
monthly events which encourage the fellows to
explore other library spaces as a group. Again,
these activities broaden the fellows understanding
of how academic libraries work while also giving
them the opportunity to meet with each other and
share their fellowship experiences.
95
assessMent
checklist for an assessment
component
96
Involve the committee and any stakeholders in the development of the final
assessment protocol; test the protocol
and revise it until it is acceptable
Administer the protocol
Analyze the results with respect to previous data in a brief report for the committee
and stakeholders
Explain the assessment protocol to the incoming committee members and provide
them with all the collected data
97
98
sUrVey of fellowshIP
PartIcIPants
The survey consists of the questions listed in the
appendix. The survey attempts to measure the fellows satisfaction, degree of recruitment, interest
in librarianship as a field, and the effect of the
Provosts Fellowship Program on their academic
experience. The Recruitment Committee administered the survey via an online digital survey system.
Nine of the eighteen former fellows responded,
which means that the survey is suggestive rather
than statistically valid. Part of the challenge for
this assessment was that many of the fellows had
left CU, and Colorado, a number of years ago.
Developing a consistent survey that the committee can apply every year before the fellows left
would eliminate these problems, and is certainly
recommended for any institution considering a
recruitment program. (see Figure 2)
Another approach would be to maintain a database of former fellows and track their progress.
Using this data the Recruitment Committee could
administer periodic surveys. This approach is appealing because former fellows may pursue several
other vocations before attending library graduate
strUctUred InterVIews
wIth forMer Mentors
The structured interviews with the former mentors provided insight both into the structure of the
Provosts Fellowship Program, but also into the
benefits for library mentors. The outline of questions is provided in the appendix. The interview
attempted to elicit the usefulness of the fellow,
how the fellow related with the library, positive
and negative experiences for the mentor, and possible changes to the program. The interviews were
considered exploratory, rather than quantitative
assessments, so the responses were not analyzed
Figure 3. Which statement below best describes your current status regarding librarianship as a profession? Please select all that apply.
100
with the GTP. One respondent suggested the committee ought to ensure that the fellows complete
their project, and one thought that the committee
should provide opportunities for the fellows to
get together. Although mentors had suggestions
for improving the support structures, most had no
problem accomplishing projects with their fellow
and some of the support issues mentioned by early
mentors in the program have been addressed by
the committee for later fellow cohorts.
Regarding the usefulness of the fellow, six of
the seven mentors reported that their fellow was
able to contribute usefully to the work that needed
to be accomplished in the CU Libraries. Four had
given their fellow a collection development role
because of the fellows subject expertise, and
three each had given their fellows a reference and
instruction role, or a bibliographer role. Only one
mentor felt that their fellow was able to contribute
usefully to the CU Libraries without using their
subject expertise; six of the seven interviewed said
that it was an important factor in the usefulness
of their fellow, and the remaining mentor said it
was still useful. Two of the mentors cited language
skills as important, and five cited academic subject
area knowledge as important. Perhaps because of
their subject expertise, many mentors did not have
much difficulty in training their fellow.
All seven mentors interviewed had enough time
to train their fellow and did not find it onerous to
have to train them, while four either developed a
training plan or a shared training program. Only
one mentor felt that their fellows performance was
not positive, and this mentor cited enthusiasm as
the major issue. The importance of enthusiasm was
part of the specific criteria that mentors felt was
significant, with four citing it as important and only
two citing subject knowledge as important.
The responding mentors discussed a number
of ideas and activities to which they exposed their
fellow. Five responded that they discussed the different types of libraries, and four each replied that
they discussed tenure, took their fellows to faculty
meetings, and took their fellows to bibliographer
101
102
With around one third of library faculty members participating in the past, it would seem the
Recruitment Committee would still have twothirds of the faculty to draw from for potential
mentors. Yet, many of the faculty members who
have not participated in the past would be difficult
for the committee to enroll. They have a variety of
reasons for not participating, some of which may
include a lack of interest, heavy administrative
responsibilities, or lack of projects suitable for
fellows with no previous library experience. The
committee has developed a core group of faculty
who are interested and willing to participate, but
enlisting the same faculty each year can exhaust
their enthusiasm. In addition, the work, research,
and service responsibilities of library faculty wax
and wane over time, making some semesters better suited for individual faculty participation in
the program than others. Without a large pool of
potential mentors, ensuring enough library faculty
participation annually will remain a significant
challenge.
In order to increase faculty participation, the
Recruitment Committee no longer requires that
potential mentors volunteer to participate and
design a project for the fellow to work on prior
to the call for applications for the Provosts Fellowship Program. Now, the committee promotes
the program to all departments across campus
without specifying areas of interest or projects
that are available. This allows the committee to
review the applications, select the best candidates
to interview, and invite potential library faculty
mentors to review the applications and participate
in the interview process. After the potential faculty
mentor has participated in this process, and the
committee has made its recommendations for
selection, the potential mentor is able to choose
whether they would like to host the particular
candidate and work with him or her to develop
a project. Encouraging participation of potential
faculty mentors in the selection process makes the
development of a project a more concrete process
103
104
conclUsIon
This chapter has provided a case study of a program developed at a university library to recruit
current graduate students with subject and/or
language expertise to a career in academic librarianship. Since many of these students might not
have considered librarianship on their own, this
program provides an additional career option. At
the same time, the program provides a mentorship
experience for librarians, and provided labor to
complete projects that might not otherwise have
been completed.
The data provided in the assessment section of
the chapter, while not statistically significant, does
suggest that the program has achieved some of
its goals. Five respondents to the post-fellowship
survey indicated that they were enrolled in a library
science program, or that they had already gradu-
references
AAUP. (2006). AAUP contingent faculty index 2006. Retrieved February 8, 2009, from
http://www.aaup.org/AAUP/pubsres/research/
conind2006.htm
ACRL. (2002). Recruitment, retention and restructuring: Human resources in academic libraries.
Ad Hoc Task Force on Recruitment and Retention
Issues, Personnel and Staff Development Officers
Discussion Group, Association of College and
Research Libraries. Chicago: ACRL.
105
IMLS. (2006). Laura Bush 21st century librarian program. Institute of Museum and Library
Services (U.S.). Washington, DC: Institute of
Museum and Library Services.
106
addItIonal readIngs
Beaubien, A. (2006). Recruiting science librarians:
A call to action! Science & Technology Libraries,
27(1), 5. doi:10.1300/J122v27n01_02
Brewer, J., & Winston, M. D. (2001). Program
evaluation for internship/residency programs
in academic and research libraries. College &
Research Libraries, 62(4), 307315.
Du, Y., Stein, B., & Martin, R. S. (2007). Content analysis of an LIS job database: A regional
prototype for a collaborative model. Libri, 57(1),
1726. doi:10.1515/LIBR.2007.17
Fennewald, J., & Stachacz, J. (2005). Recruiting
students to careers in academic libraries: One
chapters approach. College & Research Libraries
News, 66(2), 120122.
Golde, C. M., & Dore, T. (2001). At cross purposes:
What the experiences of todays doctoral students
reveal about doctoral education. Philadelphia:
Pew Charitable Trusts.
107
aPPendIX
Provosts fellowship Program: guidelines for Mentors
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Remember to schedule time during the program to meet informally with your fellow to discuss academic librarianship, library school, or related issues. Having a coffee or tea on the Hill is a great idea.
Have the fellow count this as part of his or her 150 hours.
108
5.
have Questions?
1.
2.
3.
109
Usefulness of Fellows
What tasks did you fellow engage in? Was your fellow able to usefully contribute to the work that needed
to be accomplished in the library?
Did you have enough time to train your fellow to accomplish meaningful projects? Did you find it onerous to have to train your fellow in basic library skills?
Was the subject expertise of your fellow an important factor in their usefulness to the libraries?
How would you rate the overall performance of your fellow?
Professional Development
Did participating in the fellowship help you to develop professionally, either with your librarianship or
your research?
Selection of Fellow
Are there specific criterions that you think the committee should look for when selecting fellows?
Summative Experience
Would you consider hosting a fellow again? Why or why not?
110
111
112
Chapter 6
Recruitment Experiences
in Area Studies Library
Organizations:
aBstract
This chapter discusses the urgent need to recruit individuals into academic librarianship for positions
within or otherwise related to area studies. It first outlines the major problems that continue to inhibit
recruitment efforts in area studies including negative perceptions of academic librarianship, a narrow
interpretation of qualifications, deterrents of the library and information science curriculum for subject
Ph.D.s, and the shrinking number of dedicated full-time positions. Educational incentives, experiential
opportunities, and a stronger focus on professional recruitment and collaboration by area studies library
organizations are each explored as potential solutions. The second half of the chapter presents the activities and accomplishments of WESSs Recruitment to the Profession Committee as a model for other area
studies library groups to use to stimulate professional recruitment in their respective specialties.
IntrodUctIon
Academic librarianship occupies an uneasy place
within the discourse on the graying of the professoriate and concerns regarding the recruitment
of the next generation of professionals in higher
education. While tenure-track positions in teaching departments are often fiercely competitive,
sometimes tendering several hundred applicants
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-601-8.ch006
Copyright 2010, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited.
BacKgroUnd
One of the goals of area studies is to moderate
the cultural bias in all our accustomed patterns
of life and thought. Howard W. Winger (1966,
p. 169)
While area studies in American higher education dates back to the 1930s, it was only with
the rise of the Cold War and the passage of the
National Defense Education Act (NDEA) in 1958
that government leaders formally acknowledged
the pressing need for America, in the interest of
national security, to be better informed about
heretofore neglected areas of the globe. From the
outset, then, area studies was implicitly understood
to exclude Western Europe and North America.
The NDEA used area studies as a vehicle for the
nation to meet its new security challenges by
providing funding that helped create centers and
institutes at leading universities on the Soviet
Union and Eastern Europe, the Near and Middle
East, Latin America, and elsewhere. These interdisciplinary centers facilitated the study of scores
of foreign languages and the respective cultures of
these world areas, becoming storehouses for the
accumulation of intellectual and material capital
that would in turn provide a source of expertise
for the governments national security needs and
concomitant benefits to the academic and business communities.
The passage of the Higher Education Act (Title
VI) in 1965 incorporated both the educational
programs that were part of the NDEA and the
study-abroad programs created by the FulbrightHays (FH) Act in 1961 and broadened the overall
purview of international education. This was
followed by a period of amendments and reauthorizations to the Title VI/FH programs that added
undergraduate international studies, business
and international education, language resource
centers, and various other programs to the range
of activities administered by the Department of
Education. The growth of Title VI/FH over time
113
114
Figure 1. Area studies & foreign language degrees conferred by degree-granting institutions (bachelors
through doctoral)
literature review
Scholarly literature dealing broadly with recruitment to academic librarianship is a relatively recent
phenomenon. Only over the past two decades
has the profession at large begun to face issues
of retirements, qualifications of new generations
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
Table 1. ALA-accredited LIS programs offering specific dual-/joint-masters degree programs related
to area studies
Institution
Florida
State
University
University of
Hawaii
at
Manoa
African studies/Africana
Asian studies (including East, South, and Southeast Asia)
Indiana
University at
Bloomington
Long
Island
University
Comparative literature
University of
Texas at
Austin
University of
Wisconsin at
Milwaukee
Southern
Connecticut State
University
Source: Data culled by the author through a survey of ALA-accredited LIS programs and/or university departments web sites.
Offered through NYUs Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.
122
a job. In recent years a number of academic libraries have responded to this issue by creating
post-MLS residency programs. These programs
offer full-fledged professional opportunities (at a
professional salary) of limited duration, usually
one to two years, to recent library school graduates. Residents gain the requisite professional
experience they seek for a long-term appointment elsewhere by performing a variety of tasks,
often under one or more librarian mentors, and
participating in departmental and library-wide
decision-making. Libraries in turn receive valuable services and insights in areas of need from
enthusiastic, skilled new professionals without
having to commit to a permanent position with
fixed responsibilities. Some of these residencies
have also been designated specifically as diversity initiatives for underrepresented racial and
ethnic groups. Post-MLS residencies provide the
needed bridge of experience separating recent
library school graduates from their first professional position, and more institutions should offer
residencies with an area studies focus using their
own funding or through grant-funded initiatives.
An area studies residency could also be structured
to include an intensive language study opportunity
at the institution or even an immersion program
abroad, depending on the candidates background.
As with other types of residencies, this program
could also fulfill the objectives of increasing
diversity in the library workforce by recruiting
librarians from underrepresented groups who
at the same time possess subject knowledge or
language skills in, for example, East Asian studies, Latin American studies, and Middle Eastern
studies. Since area studies positions tend not to be
entry-level (Krutulis, 1997), residency and other
post-MLS programs are critical for library school
graduates to gain the experience needed to secure
professional-level appointments.
In addition to the incentives noted above,
recruitment to the profession must become a
stronger focus at various levels within academic
librarianship. Library groups of all types, but
123
124
recruitment in wess
The Western European Studies Section (WESS)
was originally formed as a discussion group within
the Association of College and Research Libraries
(ACRL) in 1975 under the name Western European
Language Specialists (WELS). In 1979 the group
was granted formal status as an ACRL section
and amended its name to the Western European
Specialists Section represent[ing] librarians and
others in the Association of College and Research
Libraries who specialize or are otherwise professionally involved in the acquisition, organization,
and use of information sources originating in or
relating to Western European countries. In 1999
the section again updated its name to the Western
European Studies Section, the name used to this
day. Since 1980 WESS has organized programs
at the ALA Annual Conference and has twice
convened an international conference dealing
with themes relevant to Western European studies
librarianship (History of WESS, n.d.). Organizationally WESS has developed over the years
through the creation of a semi-annual newsletter, the formation of committees and discussion
groups, the offering of a sponsored research grant,
and the publication of conference proceedings
and occasional papers.3 Notably, for most of its
history WESS has embraced a diachronic concept
of Europe, as evidenced by the formation of its
first discussion group, the Classical, Medieval, and
Renaissance Discussion Group, in 1984. Today
WESS has nearly 600 individual and institutional
members representing a range of linguistic abilities, geographical specialties, and job responsibilities. Most recently, a joint ad hoc committee
with ACRLs Slavic and East European Section
(SEES) has been formed to examine the possibility
of merging the two sections into one with a more
unified, pan-European orientation.
Professional recruitment has been a priority
within WESS for nearly a decade. A joint meeting
of the WESS Cataloging Discussion Group and
the Research and Planning Committee at ALA
125
126
with links to external on-line sources of information such as library school programs, salary and
benefits information, etc. The WESS Recruitment
Toolkits page includes two separate toolkits, one
tailored for campus presentations and the other
for presentations made at meetings/conferences
of scholarly organizations and learned societies.
In addition, the Toolkits page provides extensive
links to on-line resources and a general recruitment bibliography. The Job Shadowing Program
and the ACRL Funding Opportunities for Recruitment Presentations pages outline the details of
these new programs, discussed below. Finally,
the WESS Recruitment E-mail Contact List contains the names, contact information, and areas
of specialization of WESSies who have agreed to
serve as resource persons for further information.
The original Committee web site and current wiki
continue to prove their worth with frequent visits
resulting from the ongoing personal recruitment,
liaising, and other activities undertaken by the
Committee; for example, during the first half of
2006 there were 665 unique visitors to the site,
85% of them from the U.S, and since migrating
to wiki format the Committees home page has
received over 4,600 unique hits. More impressive
still is that the Academic Librarianship & Foreign
Languages Recruitment Page has been accessed
over 7,400 times during this same period.
An informative web presence has enabled the
Committee to engage in liaison work internally
within the library community and externally with
scholarly entities whose purview intersects with
that of WESS. One of the first efforts in this
regard was a news release outlining the Committees objectives, its web site, and the recruitment
toolkits, which was distributed electronically in
late 2005 to various library publications and organizations including American Libraries, C&RL
News, Library Journal, the Journal of Academic
Librarianship (JAL), ARL, and CLIR; and scholarly organizations such the American Council of
Learned Societies (ACLS), the American Council
on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (ACTFL),
largely conisted of Committee members responding to inquiries in person, on the telephone, or via
e-mail resulting from on-line postings about the
Committee, visits to its web site, or from word-ofmouth referrals by colleagues. Since 2006 there
have been over 40 such interactions, though the
number has tapered off since summer 2008. While
these have no doubt been of mutual benefit to
both parties, they are nevertheless passive forms
of recruitment and need to be complemented by
Committee members taking more active individual
roles at their institutions and local areas. For this
reason, at the Committees virtual Midwinter
meeting in 2009, I led discussion about how this
aspect of recruitment can get somewhat neglected
by Committee members in the bigger picture of
collective recruitment efforts at the national level
and suggested ways to take a more active local
role. For individual members, local recruitment
can take the form of serving as a resource person to
talk about academic librarianship as a career path
for student workers and paraprofessionals in their
libraries, students and faculty in the departments
with which they liaise for collection development
purposes, career offices on their campuses, area
high schools, and regional library groups to which
they may belong, to name a few examples. Local
chapters of learned societies and student honors
societies are also prime candidates for recruitment efforts. The key is for Committee membes
to take active steps to reach out to colleagues in
their libraries, on their campuses, and in their
regions. Just as announcements and consistent
liaising at the national level are intended to create
opportunities for presentations or publications
with external organizations, they can have the
same results locally. Talks can be one-on-one
with individuals or given as small (or even large)
presentations. The WESS Recruitment Toolkits
were developed specifically to assist and guide
working librarians with presentations to these
various constituencies. Moreoever, through the
Recruitment Committees new Job Shadowing
Program, Committee members can now offer to
127
128
129
130
131
conclUsIon
The imminent wave of retirements in academic
libraries expected to occur over the next decade has
brought the issue of recruitment into sharp focus.
Since its inception, area studies librarianship has
experienced difficulty recruiting qualified new
professionals and today faces a critical shortage of
candidates to fill vacancies. Negative perceptions
of academic librarianship, a narrow interpretation
of qualifications, deterrents of the LIS curriculum
for subject Ph.D.s, and the shrinking number
of dedicated full-time positions all conspire to
132
references
133
134
addItIonal readIng
Ad Hoc Task Force on Recruitment & Retention
Issues. (2002, May 20). Recruitment, retention
& restructuring: Human resources in academic
libraries: A white paper. Chicago: Association of
College and Research Libraries. Retrieved March
22, 2009, from http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/
acrl/issues/recruiting/recruiting-wp.pdf
American Library Association. (n.d.). ALA recruitment clearinghouse. Retrieved March 25,
2009, from http://wikis.ala.org/recruit/index.php/
Main_Page
Association of College and Research Libraries.
(n.d.). ACRL recruitment and retention wiki.
Retrieved March 25, 2009, from http://wikis.ala.
org/acrl/index.php/RandR
Brewer, J. (1997). Post-masters residency programs: enhancing the development of new professionals and minority recruitment in academic and
research libraries. College & Research Libraries,
58(6), 528537.
135
endnotes
*
136
www.dartmouth.edu/~wessweb/wessprog/
Lkgfwd.html.
137
Section 2
Development
139
Chapter 7
The Professionalization of
Knowledge Management
Betsy Van der Veer Martens
University of Oklahoma, USA
Suliman Hawamdeh
University of Oklahoma, USA
aBstract
Although knowledge management is becoming increasingly recognized as a critical component in the
operations of both public-sector and private-sector organizations, it has yet to attain the true status of a
recognized profession for information and knowledge professionals. In order to determine the emerging
boundaries of this potential profession, the authors analyze the roles and responsibilities outlined in
descriptions of knowledge management job advertisements. Empirical data concerning the organizations
recruiting, the location of position, the qualifications needed, and the positions role and responsibilities were gathered from 1200 job postings within the United States over the course of 12 months. The
content analysis of the job postings and job description are used to identify potential areas specific and
significant to knowledge management as an emerging profession. Further suggestions as to potential
indicators of the professionalization of knowledge management are offered.
IntrodUctIon
The emergence of the global information-rich
economy, termed the knowledge economy, can now
be considered essentially complete. The ability to
create, disseminate, and apply knowledge efficiently
is deemed essential to competitiveness at both firm
and national levels (Roberts, 2001). Seminal work
by Machlup (1962), Bell (1973), and Porat (1977)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-601-8.ch007
Copyright 2010, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited.
140
141
analyzIng Knowledge
ManageMent ProfessIonal
reQUIreMents
There have been many attempts to define a set
of competencies for information and knowledge
professionals, yet emerging trends in the job
market and the variety of knowledge management
job titles makes it difficult to peg one specific set
of skills. In an attempt to provide a baseline for
further research on occupational education for
knowledge management, this study identified a
large, diverse sample of KM-oriented positions
142
Job Titles
Business Development
Content Management
Data Management
Data Analyst
Database Architect
Information Architectures
Application Architect
Information Architect
Information Security
Information Systems
Knowledge Engineer
Knowledge Support Systems Manager
Project Management
Risk Management
Technology
designated amount of years of experience. Specialty jobs, in fields such as law, engineering, and
finance, also listed specialty requirements relevant
to their particular field. Project management jobs
wanted applicants that were PMI or PMP certified,
information security jobs desired candidates with
CISSP certification, and tax-related jobs wanted
potential employees to have CPA certification.
The nature of these certifications reflects the
multifaceted skills and characteristics coveted in
knowledge professionals.
Almost all the jobs were listed with experience
requirements, ranging between 1 and 14 years of
experience. The most common experience requirement was 5 years, occurring in 45% of the jobs
that listed experience requirements. Many of the
jobs not only required experience with knowledge
management specifically, but also required experience within the industry in which the job was
categorized. None of the jobs that were listed in
this study were entry level positions, making the
job market look very competitive for new knowledge management graduates. This, of course, is
consistent with Koenigs (1999) observation that
the field is and continues to be defined by senior
knowledge management professionals in active
practice.
As KM evolved from the field of information
technology, technology is a major component
of knowledge management. Technology not
only helps with knowledge sharing, but also
with knowledge discovery, acquisition, storage
and retrieval, making it an essential part of the
practice of knowledge management. Knowledge
management technologies are helping organizations to expand internationally, enabling them to
coordinate their activities worldwide (Marwick,
2001). The Internet and information and communication technologies enable organizations to share
knowledge about their own company and their
competition (Al-Hawamdeh & Ritter, 2000). The
most-frequently named technological applications
listed in the job descriptions were Microsoft Office, SQL Server, and Project Server, Java, XML,
Unix, Linux, and Oracle, SharePoint, and Verity.
144
8.4%
8.0%
6.8%
23.2%
8.9%
6.0%
4.0%
1.9%
20.8%
Information Security
Information Architectures
Information Systems
All Technology Management Skills
8.5%
7.5%
3.5%
19.5%
Data Management
Content Management
Document/Records Mgmt
All Information Management Skills
10.0%
3.0%
2.5%
15.5%
14.0%
Miscellaneous/Other Skills
7.0%
Table 3. KM practices, processes, and technologies job skill categorization and examples
Major Categories
Sub Categories
Skill Examples
Global KM Networks
Understand and apply the collective functional, industry and countryrelated business considerations to the development and implementation
of global knowledge management process, culture, content strategy and
change management initiatives
Designs the data marts and/or tables to be used in the delivery of the
Knowledge Management products
Provide highest quality and value driven consultancy for integrating content into clients knowledge applications and workflows.
Develop and implement knowledge strategies, plans and processes for the
acquisition, storage and use of internal knowledge and thought leadership
through networks
Knowledge Organization
Demonstrated experience with metadata creation and meta tagging; indexing; database creation and maintenance; knowledge management initiatives
Knowledge Capture
Assist organizations with the process of capturing, cataloging, and maintaining critical application attributes
Knowledge Discovery
Domain and driving the creation of new knowledge objects (white papers,
position papers, journal articles, research analyses, methodologies, analyst
reports, and other publication types) aligned with current client issues and
the annual knowledge management strategic plan
Knowledge Sharing
Must possess excellent business and technical writing skills and strong
discipline to document designs, ideas and changes for knowledge management and sharing
Knowledge Retention
Prioritize and manage technology projects & issue resolution for the Portal
Management program. Coordinate with IT development for technical
execution
Portal Technologies
Provide technical leadership in the inception, analysis, and design of enterprise software solutions in the areas of identity management, portal, J2EE
applications and middleware framework, and other JES centric solutions
Technology Management
Evaluate business processes for the purpose of identifying and implementing improvement opportunities in technology, work process, and content
Technology Training
Analyze emerging trends and technologies and translating implications/impact of new technologies for existing policies, standards and architectures.
quickly
Technology Trends
Advising on use of evolving technologies to support the platform, including technologies for collaboration, knowledge management, portals and
reporting
Contribute to the ongoing development of solution/program offering approaches, methodologies, techniques, and business development tools
KM Technologies
145
Business Development
Client Relationship
Management
Business/ Competitive
Intelligence
Sub Categories
Skill Examples
Work directly with end users and management to identify opportunities for
improvement, gather requirements, develop a plan of action, and implement
the solution
Knowledge Development
Lead and assist with integration and application development projects related
to infrastructure, reporting, presentations, and professional services tools,
including remote client tools, networking, location manager, and wireless.
Project Development
System Development
The individual will be responsible for bridging the gap between the developers and the business analyst. The person will be responsible for performing
system and business impact analysis on the legacy portfolio management
system vs. the future portfolio management system
Requirement Analysis
Ensures that client issues and technical problems are handled effectively by
frequently reviewing team performance against department goals.
CRM Tools
Apply excellent customer relationship skills, experience with system integration, and prior experience
Customer Service
Responsible for evaluating client inquiries with the goal of providing new
product concepts to management
Clients Engagement
Competitive Analysis
Working and interfacing with Business Unit leaders, fellow Business Intelligence team members, and others in identifying, understanding, rationalizing
and documenting business intelligence requirements
146
Table 4. continued
Major Categories
Risk Management
Sub Categories
Skill Examples
Risk Exposure
Risk Analysis
Stay abreast of relevant industry trends such as risk management best practices
and regulatory trends affecting risk positions of companies
147
Sub Categories
Systems Engineering
System engineering functions include gaining an understanding of the processes that generate information, assessment and documentation of capability
requirements, and articulation and description of technology implementation
recommendation.
Systems Design
Develop system strategy for developing a utility based model for computing
across our clients major data centers (application platforms and various
tiered storage technologies
Systems Architecture
Works with the work process leaders and I/T product management organizations
to develop the systems architecture and plays the lead role in facilitating crossprocess and cross functional issues that impact the systems architecture
Systems Documentation
Security Management
Work closely with the architecture team to create the application design
Architectural Standards
Architectural Technologies
Develops advanced enterprise level information technology system architectures, system concepts, system designs, requirements and requirement
allocations
Responsible for architecture, design, and development of Information Management and Knowledge Management software systems
Information Systems
Information Security
Information Architectures
Skill Examples
148
Data Management
Content Management
Sub Categories
Skill Examples
Data Analysis
Data Storage
Data Warehousing
Standardization
Work with the business unit to understand their data requirements and have
a pulse on the market needs to facilitate data strategy
Perform accurate analysis and effective diagnosis of client issues and manage
day-to-day client relationships at peer client levels
Gather and analyze data, research troubleshooting options, design and implement content solutions
Knowledgebase Content
Act as the subject matter expert while developing automated information sharing and alerting other NetOps centers of severe or critical issues with a method
of information sharing, joint collaboration or other online capabilities.
Document Management
149
Project Management
Sub Categories
Skill Examples
Evaluates project life cycle and uses broad knowledge of various management
functions to anticipate organizational impact
Leadership
Responsible for defining scope and content of project and identifying work
deliverables and milestones. Leads proposal definitions and develops statements of work
Manage and assist with internal projects using project management methodologies and enterprise project management software
Risk Assessment
Establish project management policies and guidelines that improve an organizations ability to execute IT projects with greater consistency, accuracy,
and efficiency
Provide project management consulting support to federal government agencies. Provide project implementation support, including the development of
project scopes, estimating, and the development of communication plans
and procedures
Works closely with sponsors, stakeholders, users, technical team leads, and
management to coordinate project activities and provide support for core
project management functions
Must possess excellent business and technical writing skills and strong
discipline to document designs, ideas and changes for knowledge management and sharing
Manage the implementation of change management projects including stakeholder management, organizational development, knowledge management,
resistance issues, cultural issues, and communication issues
The key finding that emerges from this analysis is that, unlike research that posits a so-called
knowledge chain model, attempting to identify
so-called primary and secondary activities
in knowledge management (Holsapple & Jones,
2004, 2005), the actual job skills required in
knowledge management positions are so inextricably interwoven among the diverse activities
that engage people, information, and technologies within an organization that a better way of
visualizing them is the Venn diagram shown in
Figure 1.
150
151
152
references
Abbott, A. (1987). The system of professions:
An essay on the division of professional labor.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Al-Hawamdeh, S. (2005). Designing an interdisciplinary graduate program in knowledge
management. Journal of the American Society
for Information Science & Technology, 56(11),
1200-1206.
Al-Hawamdeh, S. (2002). Knowledge management: Re-thinking information management and
facing the challenge of managing tacit knowledge.
Information Research, 8(1), paper no. 143. Retrieved January 8, 2009 from http://informationr.
net/ir/8-1/paper143.html
Al-Hawamdeh, S., & Ritter, W. (2000). Managing
formal and informal knowledge within organizations: Re-defining the role of information professionals. In J. Edwards & J. Kidd (Eds.), Proceedings of the knowledge management conference:
KMAC 2000 (pp. 277-283). Birmingham, UK:
Operational Research Society.
Alavi, M., & Leidner, D. E. (2001). Review:
Knowledge management and knowledge management systems: Conceptual foundations and
research issues. MIS Quarterly, 25(1), 107136.
doi:10.2307/3250961
153
154
155
addItIonal readIng
Boisot, M. H. (1998). Knowledge assets: Securing competitive advantage in the information
economy. New York: Oxford University Press.
Davenport, T. H., & Prusak, L. (1998). Working
knowledge: How organizations manage what they
know. Boston: Harvard Business School Press.
156
157
Chapter 8
aBstract
This chapter examines global challenges identified in contemporary human resource management literature, and discusses selected challenges as they relate to information organizations and information
professionals. The challenges include skills shortages, talent management, shifting demographics, work/
life balance, and managing intergenerational and intercultural work groups. Approaches to these challenges are discussed as reported in the literature of human resource management, library management,
and information technology, as well as those suggested by the author. The chapter may be of interest to
employers, managers and supervisors of information professionals; emerging, entry-level and senior
information professionals at all career levels and in all types of information organizations; human resource managers in all types of information organizations.
IntrodUctIon
As a discipline, human resource management
(HRM) has a lot to offer, both in theory and practice,
to information professionals and the organizations
they support. Although major thought in HRM is
developed largely in and for corporate settings,
the principles and practices have import for nonDOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-601-8.ch008
Copyright 2010, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited.
158
Preparing organizations for an older workforce and the next wave of retirement
Threat of recession in United States or
globally
Labor shortages at all skill levels
Demographic shifts leading to a shortage
of high-skilled workers (p. 6)
age at retirement may increase slightly. The expected baby boom wave of retirements is the
basis of the general skills shortage prediction,
although the demand for research-level scientists
in the hard sciences, technology, engineering,
and math has been affected by decreased supply
in addition to anticipated losses from retirement.
The skills shortages concern indirectly relates to
another high-concern issue, the increasing costs
of health insurance and health care. SHRM Workplace Forecast identified the top three challenges
as the continuing high cost of health care in the
United States, the large number of baby boomers all retiring during a relatively short span, and
the threat of increased health care/medical costs
to the global economic competitiveness of the
United States. These challenges all turn on the
impending demographic shift caused by an aging
workforce.
The Employee Benefit Research Institute
(EBRI) publishes an annual Retirement Confidence Survey. The 2008 survey found that
overall retirement confidence, the percentage of
workers who were very confident about having
enough money for a comfortable retirement, experienced the biggest one-year drop (9%) in the
18-year history of the survey. (p.1) Given recent
declines in consumer confidence, worries about
health costs, a devastated economy and shrinking
job market, and the decline in home values, it is
only reasonable to expect those in good health
might delay retirement. For many recently-retired
persons, and those who are presently considering
retirement, health insurance and health care influence retirement confidence. EBRI (2008) further
reports: Workers continue to try to push back their
expected retirement age, often with the intention
of improving their current financial situation or
to increase their financial security in retirement.
The typical worker expects to retire at age 65,
and 20% of workers plan to push on into their
70s. (p. 5) In general, there will be shortages of
skilled employees, but predicting exactly when the
shortages will begin, how long they will last, and
159
what jobs will be affected, is impossible. Shortages are often a local or regional phenomenon
and may not reflect gross national indicators, but
thinking through the general HRM framework
allows managers and individuals in information
organizations to estimate the scope of the effect
and to do some individual interpretation based on
the factors most relevant to their situations.
160
161
Talent Management
Talent management is the art of retaining and
developing the best employees, who are often
called the high potentials. The Conference
Board defines talent as individuals who have
the capability to make a significant difference to
the current and future performance of the company. (2004, p. 3) Talent goes beyond simple
competence and skill to include an employees
long-term potential for contributing to the organization. Talent management was first applied
at the managerial and leadership levels, but has
since been involved at all levels of the organization. The hallmark abilities of high potentials
are problem solving, motivating and influencing
others, and generating innovation. Key attributes
of high potentials include strong work habits, the
ability to get along with others, and the desire for
162
163
Shifting Demographics
and the Intergenerational/
Intercultural Workforce
The workforce in general, and in information organizations, is becoming more intergenerational and
intercultural, and this trend is likely to continue.
Different generations value different benefits and
rewards. Older employees typically place higher
value on employer stability and job security,
health coverage, and retirement benefits. Younger,
entry-level employees tend to place higher value
on flexible scheduling, meaningful and creative
work, good professional development opportunities, and paid time off. (The Segal Company,
2008) However, despite the service orientation
that career mature professionals often expect
of newer professionals, compensation may be
more important to attracting and retaining newer
workers. Frequently single with one income, and
with less savings and more debt (school loans),
new professionals need to earn realistic starting
salaries. (Markgren, Dickinson et al., 2007) Of
course, these are generalizations based on age, but
there are some consistent generational differences
that merit HRM consideration.
Conflict between age cohorts can surface if
there is a perception of unfair treatment or that
164
Individualistic yet restrained. The ability to maintain ones intellectual independence and individual modes of expression
without becoming offensive, annoying or
out of line.
Egalitarian yet respectful. The ability to
recognize when it is appropriate to defer to
someone in a higher position, and when it
is appropriate to interact informally with
that person.
Assertive yet sensitive. The ability to be
assertive, but not cross the line to aggression or behaving abrasively.
Accurate yet tactful. The ability to wield
facts or business information effectively,
but in ways that do not damage others,
shame them, or cause them to lose face.
Punctual yet patient. The ability to respect the others time and schedules, but to
be understanding when they are unable to
respect yours due to their burden of work.
Warm yet cool. The ability to maintain a
relaxed and rational impression and even
convey interpersonal warmth when upset,
surprised or angry.
Optimal yet practical. The ability to aspire to perfection but settle for timely and
beneficial results.
Perhaps many cultures have the same balancing acts, but with different acceptable balance
points. Simply being aware of the cultural expertise
required to negotiate such intricacies may help
immigrant and international employees and their
US co-workers better understand the difficulty of
working outside the home culture.
Work/Life Balance
Although no longer a feminized profession,
the majority of information professionals are still
women, who at different points in their careers
may have greater need to balance work with their
real lives. Satisfaction with work, for men as
165
166
references
AARP. (2007). Leading a multigenerational
workforce. Washington, DC: AARP. Retrieved
from http://assets.aarp.org/www.aarp.org_/
articles/money/employers/leading_multigenerational_workforce.pdf
Boston Consulting Group and the World Federation of Personnel Management Associations.
(2008). Creating people advantage: How to address HR challenges worldwide through 2015,
Executive Summary. Retrieved from http://www.
bcg.com/impact_expertise/publications/publication_list.jsp?pubID=2638
Davis, N., & Miraza, B. (2008, September 26).
Thought leaders focus on finding, keeping talent.
HR News. Retrieved from http://shrm.org/hrnews_
PUBLISHED/articlesCMS_026727.asp
Employee Benefit Research Institute. (2008). The
2008 retirement confidence survey (Issue Brief
No. 316). Retrieved from http://www.ebri.org/
publications/ib/index.cfm?fa=ibDisp&content_
id=3903
Grove, C., & Hallowell, W. (2002). The seven
balancing acts of professional behavior in the
United States: A cultural values perspective.
Retrieved from http://www.grovewell.com/pubusa-professional.html
Hira, R. (2008, January 14). No, the tech skills
shortage doesnt exist. Information Week. Retrieved from http://www.informationweek.com/
news/management/outsourcing/showArticle.
jhtml?articleID=205601556
167
Hoffman, T. (2008, December 30). The 9 hottest skills for 09. Computerworld. Retrieved
from http://www.computerworld.com/action/
article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&article
Id=330106
Katz, M. (2007). Saying Yes to success: Creating the engaged employee. Women in Business,
58(6), 2629.
Law Librarian Blog. (2008, July 24). Do senior
librarians have a moral obligation to retire? Messages posted at http://lawprofessors.typepad.
com/law_librarian_blog/2008/07/do-senior-facul.
html
Luftman, J. (2008, January 14) Yes, the tech
skills shortage is real. Information Week. Retrieved from http://www.informationweek.
com/news/management/training/showArticle.
jhtml?articleID=205601557
Markgren, S., Dickinson, T., Leonard, A., &
Vassilliadis, K. (2007). The five-year itch: Are
libraries losing their most valuable resources?
Library Administration and Management, 21(2),
7076.
Newhouse, R., & Spisak, A. (2004). Fixing the
first job. Library Journal, 129(13), 4446.
Society for Human Resource Management.
(2007). The 2007-2008 workplace trends list.
Retrieved from http://www.shrm.org/trends/
Society for Human Resource Management. (2008,
June). SHRM workplace forecast for 2008-2009.
Alexandria, VA: Society for Human Resource
Management.
The Conference Board. (2004). Integrated and
integrative talent management, Executive summary (Report R-1345-04-ES). New York: The
Conference Board.
168
addItIonal readIng
Armour, S. (2005, November 6). Gen Y: Theyve
arrived at work with a new attitude. USA Today.
Berger, L. A., & Berger, D. R. (2004). The talent
management handbook: Creating organizational
excellence by identifying, developing and promoting your best people. New York: McGraw-Hill.
Eyster, L., Johnson, R. W., & Toder, E. (2008).
Current strategies to employ and retain older
workers [Final report to the Department of Labor].
Washington, DC: The Urban Institute. Retrieved
from http://www.urban.org/publications/411626.
html
Hill, A., & Johnson, J. (2008). Stephen Abram on
the new generation of librarians. Texas Library
Journal, 84(3), 118120.
McCauley, C., & Wakenfield, M. (2006). Talent management in the 21st century: Help your
company find, develop and keep its strongest
workers. Journal for Quality and Participation,
29(4), 47.
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170
Chapter 9
aBstract
When new employees join an organization, a great deal of information must be provided to support their
success. While clarifying job duties, outlining operational procedures, and reviewing benefits details
are priorities, integrating employees into the culture of the organization is perhaps the most critical,
and most often overlooked, aspect of orientation programs. In the ever-expanding field of information
science and knowledge management, it is imperative that organizations provide comprehensive orientation programs that not only welcome new employees but successfully integrate them to their long-term
contributions to the organization and the profession. This chapter examines the importance of orientation
programs and discusses how current orientation programs in several academic and research libraries
are effectively focusing on organizational culture and employee integration.
IntrodUctIon
Positive or good turnover in organizations is the
combination of voluntary and involuntary turnover
that keeps the organization refreshing itself. This
turnover can be made up of poor performers who
leave or it can be a manageable rate of turnover that
brings in employees with new skills, insights and
motivation. Bad turnover is when people we wish
to retain leave or when turnover is so high that it
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-601-8.ch009
Copyright 2010, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited.
workers are much less mobile, but retention programs are no less important than they would be
during periods of strong economic growth.
By devoting the necessary time, resources
and energy into developing and delivering a
comprehensive retention program, it is possible
to reduce the amount of bad turnover in your
library. A holistic retention program includes well
articulated components like: integration-focused
orientation to the organization and the position;
training, staff and organizational development;
mentoring, performance coaching and evaluation;
structured rewards and recognition programs;
remuneration packages; and, exit interviews. This
chapter focuses on integration-focused orientation programs, explores the connections between
employee retention and successful integration,
and discusses how current orientation programs
in several academic and research libraries are effectively focusing on organizational culture and
employee integration.
orIentatIon, IntegratIon
& retentIon
Increasing employee-organization
connections through orientation
Many factors contribute to why librarians leave
their libraries. Turnover studies in academic
librarianship (Christopher, Tucker, 2008; Colding, 2006; Luzuis, Ard, 2006) cite reasons such
as taking a position elsewhere, retirement, job
satisfaction, unpleasant work environment and
compensation as being major factors in why librarians leave their libraries. While well-structured
orientation programs will not address all of these
issues, they might increase employee loyalty to
the organization, increase job satisfaction, and
improve the work environment, thereby mitigating some of these reasons.
Most large organizations, including academic libraries, have new employee orientation
171
172
Integration-Based orientation
in academic libraries
Effective orientation programs include several
components, including clearly defined topic areas,
checklists of activities and information, presentations, and handbooks or other welcoming materials
(Shea, 1981; Smith, 2001). Several academic and
research libraries employ orientation programs
that specifically emphasize organizational culture
to improve employee integration. Such organizations include University of Arizona Library, University of Maryland Libraries, North Carolina State
University Libraries and University of California,
Irvine Libraries. While each library has tailored
orientation programming to their organizational
priorities and philosophies, strategically the approaches are similar. Each of these libraries bases
their program on the idea that orientation must be
much more than routine paperwork; the organization must proactively consider culture, systems,
and in what ways the organization facilitates
employee learning and integration.
culture was beginning to erode. Anecdotal indicators included a divergence in the work of various
teams and a perceived loss of understanding of
organizational history. Investigation indicated
that this erosion may be due, in part, to a lack of
training on team culture since the models initial
implementation.
In 2003, the Library created a new employee
orientation program focusing on the team philosophy of the organization, emphasizing the Library
as a consensus-based learning organization. The
program also focuses on team behavior and team
goal development, laying the groundwork for new
employees to build relationships and successfully
function in the team-based model. Therefore
the orientation program not only integrates new
employees into the organizational culture, but
it also helps to sustain the organizations team
structure.
To develop the sessions, HROE team members
sought methods to address common concerns.
A survey of new employees was implemented
to identify orientation gaps. Team leaders were
consulted on what the hiring teams needed. As a
result, the HROE team created a New Employee
Workbook, instituted the designation of a buddy
in the hiring team, and created a checklist of activities for hiring teams to provide during the first
six months of employment. The New Employee
Orientation program was expanded to include
more information and opportunities to practice
collaborative team skills, and team leaders were
encouraged to take a more active coaching and
mentoring role.
In addition to a formal review of employment policies, benefits, and compensation, the
Librarys orientation efforts include New Employee Orientation Foundation Sessions, which
are five in-person group sessions offered twice
per year by the HROE team. All new employees,
librarians and non-librarians alike, are required
to attend these sessions, and ideally they do so
during their first year of employment. Sessions
173
174
their new role to these themes and the larger context of the Libraries. By focusing on a few core
concepts, the Libraries increase the likelihood that
employees will retain these themes as priorities,
and in this way, the organization is able to lay a
consistent foundation for new employees across
the organization.
The orientation program includes two parts.
Part I is conducted by the employees supervisor,
colleagues, and human resources staff and is designed to support the integration of new employees
in their home department and division. Part I is
comprised of checklists of information and action
items to be addressed during a new employees
first day, week, and month at the Libraries. The
checklists include procedural, job-specific and
departmental information, emphasizing clear
communication about job responsibilities and
expectations between the new employee and their
supervisor. Part I also includes the New Employee
Reference Guide which is provided in electronic
and paper form to new employees. The guide
outlines the orientation program and includes a
glossary of terms and other useful information
about the Libraries. New employees review this
guide during an in-person meeting with the Libraries training staff and are encouraged to consult
the guide throughout their orientation.
Part II is designed to integrate new employees
at the organizational level. Part II includes a series
of four in-person modules familiarizing new employees with the organizations history, plans and
structure. Modules are managed by the Libraries
Training & Organizational Development Officer
and are presented by the Libraries training leaders well as current librarians and staff. Both new
hires and more seasoned employees are invited
to attend all modules, providing opportunities
for new employees to build relationships with
and learn from experienced employees as well as
other new hires. The Libraries also hosted sessions
exclusively for current supervisors. Supervisors
received program messages first-hand, ensuring
175
176
Implications
The orientation programs discussed here focus
on specific aspects of each organizations culture,
with the goal of more effectively and more consistently integrating new employees. By implementing an integration-based program, organizational
leaders seek to increase their impact on new
employee learning by focusing that learning on
organizational priorities and culture.
The organizations discussed here provide these
focused learning opportunities to librarians and
paraprofessionals alike. As job duties, such as
providing reference service or managing complex
cataloging, are increasingly shared among librarians and paraprofessionals in academic libraries, it
follows that effectively integrating all employees,
regardless of title, is imperative. Additionally,
including experienced librarians and paraprofessionals in the learning process, as either meeting/
session leaders or participants, creates additional
opportunities for cultural integration, which may
positively impact employee retention. During
orientation activities new employees can connect
with employees across the organization and observe
how colleagues model aspects of the organizations
culture, (Ballard and Blessing, 2006).
fUtUre research
Measuring the Impact of IntegrationBased orientation on retention
Human resource professionals both within and
beyond the field of information science recognize
the importance of orientation programs to support
new employee success, (Shea, 1981; Fowler, 1983;
Weingart, Kochan, and Hedrich, 1998; Smith,
2001; Pynes, 2004; Arthur, 2006.) However, it is
quite difficult to measure the impact of orientation
and integration programs on job satisfaction and
retention due to the number of other factors that
affect employee experiences, including relationships with supervisors, workload, salary, among
many others, (Ballard and Blessing, 2006).
While the four library organizations discussed
here have utilized various assessment tools to collect participant feedback, including surveys, and
routinely monitor and update program content,
additional evaluation is necessary to draw firm
conclusions on the effects of integration programs
in academic and research libraries. To effectively
measure the impact of integration-based programs,
the authors recommend that evaluation efforts
include both qualitative and quantitative efforts,
with particular attention paid to the effect of these
programs on retention. In-depth interviews or
focus groups with new employees are effective
ways to gather evidence, anecdotal or otherwise,
of the impact of orientation programs on integration. Such data collection allows participants to
share if and/or how the orientation experience
contributed to their integration, and specifically
what aspects of the orientation process were most
effective. This also allows evaluators to further
investigate employee impressions and responses
in real time. Longitudinal evaluation through the
course of employment could reveal the impact of
orientation efforts as employees learn more about
their work and build working relationships with
colleagues, and may lead to an understanding of
the impact of these types of orientation programs
conclUsIon
Academic libraries are increasingly looking
toward integration-based orientation programs
as a way to immerse new employees into the
work of the library and into the organizational
culture, and in the long term, improve employee
success and retention. Many organizations have
considered culture, systems, employee learning
and integration to develop multi-faceted orientation programs. Future research on the effectiveness of these integration-based orientation
programs should shed light on the effectiveness
of integration-focused programs as well as the
relationship between such programs and retention
in academic libraries.
references
Arthur, D. (2006). Recruiting, interviewing,
selecting & orientating new employees. New
York: AMACOM, American Management Association.
Ballard, A., & Blessing, L. (2006). Organizational
socialization through employee orientation. College & Research Libraries, 67(3), 240248.
177
178
179
Chapter 10
aBstract
Librarians enter the academy with little background in the pedagogical and theoretical intricacies of
teaching and learning. With library instruction responsibilities on the rise, institutions are searching for
ways to encourage librarians to engage in the process of learning how to teach. Instruction librarians
and coordinators can build a peer learning program that incorporates a progressive teaching structure
where librarians graduate from shadow teaching to team teaching to solo teaching. By combining support in the classroom with a dynamic mentoring environment, librarians work as a team in order to
provide students with high quality instructional experiences that promote lifelong learning. Formative
assessment is built into the mentoring process while simultaneously providing analysis of the program.
Suggestions for professional development and a reading list are included.
IntrodUctIon
Each day in the classroom is as much a learning
experience as a teaching experience. (Vidmar,
2006, pp. 140)
As access to information grows increasingly
more complex and the scope of inter-disciplinary
and multi-disciplinary studies change the landscape
of research and information management, academic
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literature review
There is a debate raging among librarians. The
future of how academic librarians promote information literacy in the academy is being questioned
within the larger context of higher education
(Elmborg, 2006; Jacobs, 2008; Ward 2006). The
outcome will depend on how librarians adapt to
their roles as educators in the 21st century.
Through a content analysis of job announcements in the 1990s, Lynch and Smith (2001)
concluded that virtually all reference jobs included
instruction responsibilities, predicting that the
development of job titles that include instruction (e.g. bibliographic instruction, information
literacy) would quickly become common place in
the academic library. Avery and Ketchner (1996)
confirmed that employers do indeed value instruction skills in new librarians, while Shonrock and
180
Peer learning
What is a peer learning program? Often used as a
student-centered approach to facilitate academic
growth among college students (Boud, 2001), peer
learning presents an informal, safe environment for
individuals sharing a learning experience to grow
with and learn from each other while stimulating
open discussion. Parallel to peer learning is peer
coaching, a learning environment which is nonevaluative, voluntary and controlled largely by the
learner (Gottesman, 2000, pp. xiv). Levene and
Frank (1993) provide a detailed framework of peer
coaching using a foundation of confidentiality and
181
182
another teacheris a normalized part of enacting and developing pedagogy for both teachers
involved (p. 336).
And finally, ACRLs Standards for Proficiencies for Instruction Librarians and Coordinators
(2007) offers two cogent indicators for developing
a peer learning program. First, under assessment
and evaluation proficiencies, an instruction coordinator, Develops and implements iterative peer
instructor assessment models in order to provide
constructive feedback to librarians on teaching
effectiveness. Stresses commitment to improving
teaching, rather than exclusively evaluating job
performance (Indicator 2.2). Second, under the
rubric of teaching skills, the effective instruction
librarian, [s]hares teaching skills and knowledge
with other instructional staff (Indicator 12.7).
Under this rubric, instruction coordinators and
librarians can develop a formal programmatic
initiative that will recommence prior experience a
librarian may have gained from her or his education or previous employment.
In developing a peer learning environment,
there are four elements to consider: building a
progressive teaching environment in and out of
the classroom, developing mentoring relationships between new and experienced librarians,
professional development within and outside the
organization and assessment of a peer learning
environment.
Building a Progressive
teaching environment In and
out of the classroom
The challenge in learning to teach is profoundly
summed up by Parker Palmer, good teaching
cannot be reduced to technique: good teaching
comes from the identity and integrity of the
teacher (p. 149). How can we, as experienced
teachers, help to foster this reflective process for
new librarians and in turn continue on the journey
of learning for ourselves? There is much written
on peer-to-peer learning in student environments
183
184
185
186
assessment of a Peer
learning environment
The question is not How do you convince a
librarian to be a better teacher? Rather the
question is How can you spark the motivation
of librarians to pursue a medley of activities surrounding teaching and learning? As previously
mentioned, ACRLs Standards for Proficiencies
for Instruction Librarians and Coordinators offers
a network of proficiencies that could be used to
guide peer evaluations in order to provide librarians with constructive feedback (ACRL, 2007).
The list of proficiencies include skills in the areas
of administration, assessment and evaluation,
communication, curriculum, information literacy
integration, instructional design, leadership, planning, presentation, promotion, subject expertise,
and teaching skills. By combining these fundamentals with the illustrative exercises previously
suggested (e.g. pre and post instructional meetings
and journaling), instruction coordinators can dual
purpose these efforts and provide a foundation for
integrative formative assessment.
187
conclUsIon
While much has been written in education literature about retaining teachers through mentoring
programs, little has been written exemplifying the
experiences of teacher librarians. While many of
their shared personal experiences parallel that of
librarianship, most librarians do not spend entire
days in the classroom. Our instruction experiences
wax and wane with the research assignments of
the semester.
188
references
American Library Association. (2000, January).
Information literacy competency standards for
higher education. Retrieved from http://www.ala.
org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/standards/informationliteracycompetency.cfm
Association of College and Research Libraries.
(2007, June). Standards for Proficiencies for Instruction Librarians and Coordinators. Retrieved
from http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/
standards/profstandards.cfm
Avery, C., & Ketchner, K. (1996). Do instruction
skills impress employers? College & Research
Libraries, 57, 249253.
Boud, D., Cohen, R., & Sampson, J. (Eds.). (2001).
Peer learning in higher education: Learning from
and with each other. London: Kogan Page.
Brookfield, S. (2006). The skillful teacher: On
technique, trust, and responsiveness in the classroom. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Palmer, P. J. (1998). The courage to teach: Exploring the inner landscape of a teachers life. San
Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Shonrock, D., & Mulder, C. (1993). Instruction
librarians: acquiring the proficiencies critical to
their work. College & Research Libraries, 54,
137149.
Stenberg, S., & Lee, A. (2002). Developing pedagogies: Learning the teaching of English. College
English, 64(3), 326347. doi:10.2307/3250737
Vidmar, D. J. (2005). Reflective peer coaching: Crafting collaborative self-assessment in
teaching. Research Strategies, 20(3), 135148.
doi:10.1016/j.resstr.2006.06.002
Walter, S. (2005). Improving instruction: What
librarians can learn from the study of college
teaching. In H. A. Thompson (Ed.), Currents and
convergence: Navigating the rivers of change:
Proceedings of the twelfth national conference of
the Association of College and Research Libraries, April 7 10, 2005, Minneapolis, Minnesota
(pp. 363-379). Chicago: Association of College
& Research Libraries.
Ward, D. (2006). Revisioning Information Literacy for Lifelong Meaning. Journal of Academic
Librarianship, 32(4), 396402. doi:10.1016/j.
acalib.2006.03.006
addItIonal readIng
Meulemans, Y., & Brown, J. (2001). Educating instruction librarians: A model for Library
and Information Science education. Research
Strategies, 18(4), 253264. doi:10.1016/S07343310(03)00002-8
Angelo, T. (1993). Classroom assessment techniques: A handbook for teachers. San Francisco,
CA: Jossey-Bass.
189
190
Ward, D., & Raspa, D. (Eds.). (2000). The collaborative imperative: librarians and faculty working
together in the information universe. Chicago, IL:
Association of College and Research Libraries.
Williamson, M. G. (1986). Coaching and counseling skills. Guidelines for training in libraries, 7.
London: Library Association.
addItIonal readIng:
ProfessIonal assocIatIons
American Library Association, Library Instruction Round Table (LIRT).http://www3.baylor.
edu/LIRT/
Association of College and Research Libraries.
Instruction Section (IS). http://www.ala.org/ala/
mgrps/divs/acrl/about/sections/is/homepage.
cfm
Association of College and Research Libraries,
ACRL Institute for Information Literacy.http://
www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/issues/infolit/
professactivity/iil/welcome.cfm
EDUCAUSE. http://www.educause.edu/
International Federation of Library Associations
and Institutions (IFLA) Information Literacy Section. http://www.ifla.org/VII/s42/index.htm
Library Orientation Exchange (LOEX). http://
www.emich.edu/public/loex/index.html
LOEX-of-the-West. http://www.library.unlv.edu/
conferences/loexw/
National Forum on Information Literacy. http://
www.infolit.org/index.html
Workshop for Instruction in Library Use (WILU).
http://library.concordia.ca/wilu2009/
191
Chapter 11
aBstract
Due to constant change and intense competition within the information environment, developing a diversified portfolio of professional capabilities ensures employability and career mobility for future Information
Professionals (IPs). Capability development begins with career development planning. However, without
the proper navigation device to guide future IPs, career plans can go awry and career opportunities
may vanish. Because the IPs role is constantly changing, unforeseen opportunities exist for those who
address career development planning beginning the first day of graduate school. This chapter provides
future IPs with a navigation tool and roadmap to develop career plans in an unpredictable environment
and discusses implications for the future viability of the profession.
IntrodUctIon
Initially, future Information Professionals (IPs),
sometimes referred to as nontraditional librarians,
may feel lost or confused about career direction
primarily due to the transitional nature of the library and information science world. Dority (2006)
states that familiar MLIS designation signifies
that we possess a stunning diverse skill set, that
can be deployed in an equally stunning number of
places, positions, and opportunities(p. 1). Many IPs
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BacKgroUnd
Career development planning in the information
profession, a new flexible profession, should
begin prior to obtaining the Master of Science
in Information Science. The Special Libraries
Association states that:
An Information Professional (IP) strategically
uses information in his/her job to advance the
mission of the organization through the development, deployment, and management of information resources and services. The IP harnesses
technology as a critical tool to accomplish goals.
IPs include, but are not limited to, librarians,
knowledge managers, chief information officers,
web developers, information brokers, and consultants. (Special Libraries Association, 2009)
To take advantage of opportunities in this diverse profession, information professionals must
chart their career paths through a sound career
development plan. Gordon (2008) suggests that
career planning should not be happenstance but
that one must take time to plan and study the possibilities that exist to map out a successful career.
Priscilla Shontz (2002) suggests that assessing
ones goals, skills, and the job market are important
components of career development planning.
According to Gordon (2008), LIS career
choices and potential career paths are now continually expanding to encompass new skills, new
knowledge, new generational viewpoints, and
myriad new opportunities (p. xi). By developing
a diverse portfolio of professional capabilities, an
information professional ensures employability,
career mobility and guards against environmental
192
threats. This cannot be accomplished without career development planning. Pantry and Griffiths
(2003) suggest that career development begin at the
onset and should be assessed regularly to determine
where you are going, and advocate developing a
portfolio career, a tool to give employers an indepth picture of ones skill sets. Simonsen (1997)
states, just as organizations need to do strategic
planning to anticipate and prepare for market
changes and competition, so do individuals need
to plan their careers strategically. Career development planning is the first step in managing ones
career strategically (p.7).
193
251). Because libraries lag behind their competitors, technological improvements provide little
differentiation and accelerate commoditization.
According to Dawson (2005), as everything else
becomes commoditized [driven by technology],
what will remain as a source of differentiation are
the things that are most human [people] (p.320).
Within the information profession, people are the
strategic differentiator, not technology.
The current environment presents both opportunities and challenges. In terms of opportunities,
the profession possesses the foundational skills
that can be applied in new ways to deliver increased
value. The challenges involve keeping pace with
change and not staying rooted in traditions without
reexamining the purpose of those traditions.
194
Information Architect
Knowledge Manager
Information Manager
Business Research Analyst
Strategic Research Consultant
Technical
Innovation
Facilitation
Presentation
Project & Change Management
Technical capabilities represent the specialized foundational skills developed for initial
employment. The remaining leadership capabilities compliment the technical and are regarded
as most essential based upon conversations with
Library Administrators (M. Bedard personal communication, June 30, 2005; Edwards personal
communication, July 7, 2004; A. Hallam personal
communication, July 2, 2004; L. Thompson personal communication, June 24, 2004). The outer
ring connecting the capabilities represents the
information market. The information market represents the hiring organizations desiring specific
capabilities. In essence, all capabilities developed
should be highly valued capabilities within the
information market.
195
technical capability
For entry-level professional positions, organizations will hire future IPs partially based upon their
technical capabilities. For example, a position
involving developing web based communications
applications might require technical expertise,
such as information architecture or usability testing. For future IPs, developing a strong technical
expertise combined with high demand capabilities,
such as those outlined in Figure 2, places the IP
in a position to pursue a variety of professional
opportunities. Over time, new capabilities can be
added as the market changes. Keeping technical
capabilities up-to-date is critical to the career development of IPs. Information professionals can
keep their technical capabilities current by reading
relevant technical literature, taking online tutorials, attending training sessions and workshops,
and taking relevant courses. Teresa Dalston, IP
currently serving as a Project Manager at INFUSE,
suggest constantly expand the tools you use but
establish a core set of tools that meet your daily
needs; and be the expert on those tools (personal
communication, August 13, 2006).
Innovation capability
For the future IP, professional responsibility goes
beyond providing customers with raw data. Data
is abundant. However, customers possess problems that require utilizing data strategically to
solve problems. Often problem solving requires
innovation and represents a core competency
future IPs should master. For perpetuation, all
organizations must make innovation part of their
DNA. Kaplan and Norton (2004) state that, organizational culture must emphasize innovation,
disruption, and change as core values (p.153).
Time, money, and people always will be resource
constraints. However, those who are able to create
solutions to overcome resource constraints will
be valued highly. Much to their own detriment,
organizations too often become consumed with
196
facilitation capability
Facilitation, as defined by Lauge Rasmussen
(2003), is a process guide of creative cooperation to meet the challenges of intra- and interorganisational cooperation (p.1). Facilitation
often conveys negative images of time wasting
meetings. Yes, some meetings are a waste of
time because participants leave without receiving value from the meeting. However, without
good facilitators most meetings have little chance
of being productive. The facilitator employs
the core capabilities of facilitation, which according to Rasmussen (2003) are awareness, a
flexible use of creative methods, an affiliation, a
resonance and tacit knowledge (p.9) to ensure
meeting objectives are accomplished. Driven by
increased emphasis on the bottom line, organizations openly embrace facilitation as a means of
obtaining increased productivity, efficiency, and
value leading to a competitive advantage (Silver
& Woods, 1995). According to Silver and Woods
Presentation capability
For maximum effectiveness, quality presentations
are structured, impactful, and simple (Friga &
Rasiel, 2001). Without good presentation skills,
selling ideas to diverse audiences may prove difficult. According to Friga & Rasiel (2001), A
poor presentation can make a good idea tough for
an audience to grasp. Conversely, a well written
presentation in service to a good idea can be a
powerful instrument of change (p.108). Friga &
Rasiel emphasize two key rules when developing
presentations. First, make presentations logical
and easy to follow. Second, during practice, videotape the presentation and critique to identify
areas of improvement. Another good method of
developing or enhancing presentation skills is to
note those presentations that made an impression,
and then ask the question, why? Next, pattern the
good features you remember from the presenter.
Finally, read resources designed to improve presentation capabilities.
197
198
recoMMendatIons roadMaP
The roadmap proposes solutions for accelerating
capability development of future IPs. In its simplicity, the roadmap (Figure 3) integrates all aspects
of the CDC representing a continuous process of
planning, executing, and measuring. Each stage
requires specific inputs to produce specific outputs, thus ensuring alignment. Planning entails
developing an initial picture of expected future
accomplishments within the profession. Executing
involves engaging in specific development activities to enhance or develop new skills. Measuring
requires tracking progress regularly and making
adjustments where necessary.
Plan
Manage capability development like a multimillion dollar project. Be highly selective and
Figure 3. Roadmap model
At the start of your library career, you need committee work because it helps you build connections
in the profession it teaches you things, it helps
you gain perspective, and it connects you to your
professional cohort (those who joined the profession at the same time you did) (2004, p.462).
199
execute
Seek internships. Whether paid or unpaid, internships provide excellent opportunities to develop
technical skills. Additionally, when organizations
lack resources and expertise to address recurring
problems, internships potentially present opportunities to assist in solving problems. Problem solving provides the opportunity to develop the four
complimentary leadership capabilities (project
200
Measure
fUtUre IMPlIcatIons
The future viability of the profession hinges on
the ability to expand capabilities, to seize new opportunities, and to deliver differentiated services.
Strengthening and developing the profession
improves competitive positioning and extends
relevance to multiple environments. However,
the process begins with developing future IPs.
Academic institutions, information organizations,
and professional associations all play pivotal roles
in accelerating the capability development of
future IPs by providing the proper infrastructures
to support professional growth. Improved capabilities generate better ideas; ideas that could propel
the profession to the forefront of the information
environment. Future IPs represent tomorrows
leaders. However, without an increased emphasis
on creating development opportunities for future
IPs, break-through innovations will be difficult to
achieve. The lack of development opportunities
201
conclUsIon
For the future IP, starting career development
the first day of graduate school provides the key
to future viability and gaining a competitive advantage. The process begins with on-going career
planning and development to enhance the library
and information science degree. Information professionals need the proper framework for creating
career development plans. The CDC provides a
navigation tool to assist future IPs and can be
adapted easily to accommodate IPs at various
stages of their careers. Finally, the CDC can be
employed by information organizations as they
consider their development needs.
references
Campbell, J. (2006). Changing a cultural icon:
The academic library as virtual destination.
[from Academic Search Complete Full Text
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Charan, R., Drotter, S., & Noel, J. (2001). The
leadership pipeline: How to build the leadershippowered company. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Dawson, R. (2005). Developing knowledge-based
client relationships: Leadership in professional
services (2nd ed.). Burlington, ME: Elsevier Butterworth--Heinemann.
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Urs, S. (2006). Gutenberg to Google: Changing facets of libraries. [from Library Literature
& Information Science Full Text database.].
Information Studies, 12(4), 197204. Retrieved
November 24, 2008.
addItIonal readIng
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Innovation, creativity,
and Problem solving
Breen, B., & Hamel, G. (2007). The future of
management. Boston, MA: Harvard Business
School Press.
Florida, R. (2003). The rise of the creative class:
And how its transforming work, leisure, community and everyday life. New York: Basic Books.
Johansson, F. (2006). Medici effect: What elephants and epidemics can teach us about innovation. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School
Press.
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facilitation
Heron, J. (2000). The complete facilitators handbook. London, UK: Kogan Page Limited.
Joiner, B., Scholtes, P., & Streibel, B. (2003). The
team handbook (3rd ed.). Madison, WI: Joiner/
Oriel Inc.
Mintzberg, H. (1994). The rise and fall of strategic
planning. London, UK: Prentice-Hall.
Presentation
Carnegie, D. (1967). The quick and easy way to
effective speaking. Broadway, NY: Pocket.
Reynolds, G. (2008). Presentation zen: Simple
ideas on presentation design and delivery. Berkley,
CA: NewRiders.
Section 3
Retention
206
Chapter 12
Understanding Organizational
Culture and Group Dynamics:
Reframing the Normative Orientation
of the Role of Information
Professionals within Organizations
Doralyn Rossmann
Montana State University, USA
aBstract
The field of library and information science will benefit from a greater understanding of the function of
individuals in relation to organizational culture and group dynamics, including how individual experiences underlie the culture of an organization. Understanding how these factors can shape successful
human resources management will help todays information science and management organizations in
their recruitment, development, and retention efforts. It is suggested here that, while MLIS curricula and
library organizations have traditionally focused on leadership as a function of management, a reorientation towards development of leadership skills at all levels of the organization will have a positive effect
on organizational culture and group dynamics. In development of this concept, this chapter provides an
overview of traditional approaches to understanding organizational culture and group dynamics and how
these are applied in the information and library science literature and curricula; explores an alternate
normative orientation towards the understanding of organizational culture and group dynamics as a
function of all individuals in an organization and not just management; identifies ways in which information professionals and organizations can use this knowledge to recruit, develop, and retain employees
in the information sciences profession; and explores future research directions in these areas.
IntrodUctIon
The library and information science profession has
a history of addressing organizational culture issues
in its graduate curriculum, through the literature,
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-601-8.ch012
Copyright 2010, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited.
als as equally responsible for the work environment will help create an organizational culture
that encourages the recruitment and retention of
employees who are well-matched to the needs,
values, and goals of the organization. It is important to recognize the value for anyone, at any
place in the organization to have an understanding
of organizational culture. Ultimately, the culture
of an organization has an effect on everyone in
that organization, regardless of position or level
of responsibility. Likewise, each individual has
the potential to influence his or her organization. Several approaches exist which libraries
should consider to reframe the understanding of
organizational culture and group dynamics from
a management function to a function of every
individual in the organization. The approaches
proposed here include Distributed Leadership,
Job Embeddedness, The Bad Apple Concept,
and Positive Relationships at Work. While the
concepts in this chapter are just some examples of
how to apply this different normative orientation,
it is hoped that these concepts help merge theory
with praxis or practical application for use in
information organization settings.
BacKgroUnd
organizational culture and
group dynamics defined
Understanding the field of organizational culture
requires a background introduction into a broader
field of study: organization theory. According to
Tompkins (2005), organization theory is the study
of how and why complex organizations behave
as they do. Specifically, it is the study of formal
structures, internal processes, external constraints,
and the ways organizations affect and are effected
by their members (p. 1). This broader field of
study has three subsets: the branch of organization
theory, the branch of organizational behavior, and
the branch of management theory. The organiza-
207
208
Table 1. Library and information science courses with a focus on management in relation to organizational culture
Administration of InformationAgencies: This course focuses on the managerial role in information agencies.The purpose of the class is to highlight
thecorecompetenciesnecessaryfor informationorganization management, summarizesomeof thekey theories behind management, and providean opportunities [sic] for students to experiment with tools for improving managerial effectiveness. (University atAlbany, State University of NewYork, 2009)
Managing Information Organizations: Applies theories and techniques of management to libraries, information centers,
and information enterprise, concentrating on political processes, leadership, communication, human resources, organizational
structure, decision making, planning, and control. Also includes elements of project management. (Drexel University, 2009)
Administration of Libraries: Addresses the general principles of administration and their application to the organization and
management of different types of libraries. Core components include general management techniques and administrative procedures, budget preparation, human resources issues, and facilities and resources management. Students will learn how to apply standards for evaluation of libraries and how to develop functional library programs. Provides a forum for the discussion of
the roles of different types of libraries in society. Includes a required field experience. (Clarion University of Pennsylvania, 2009)
Organizational Management: Survey of management issues common to all information environments --understanding organizations,
decision making, hiring and personnel, grant writing, and marketing. (University of Iowa, 2009)
While the literature reflects the study of organizational culture and group dynamics as a
function of management, the library and information science graduate curricula demonstrates this
orientation, as well. The library and information
science graduate programs orient, educate, shape
attitudes, and provide a normative orientation for
librarians for work in information organizations.
Consequently, it is helpful to look at the graduate
curricula for elements of organizational culture and
the types of courses in which it is addressed. Currently, there are 62 American Library Association
(ALA) accredited Masters programs in Library
and Information Studies (ALA, 2008a). The most
recent requirements for accreditation highlight
issues of current importance to the profession:
The most important issues at the time of the revision [of the accreditation requirements] included:
diversity, systematic planning, student learning
outcomes, definition of the field, interaction with
other fields of study and other campus units,
distance education, globalization, management,
multiple degree programs, values, and ethics.
(ALA, 2008b, p. 14)
Organizational culture and group dynamics are
not named specifically, but management is listed
as an important issue. As is seen in the following
sample of ALA accredited programs, human resources issues such as organizational culture and
group dynamics tend to be included in courses in
management, if included at all, in the curriculum.
These programs include a diversity of value placed
in understanding organizational culture as a key
component of librarianship; demonstrate the variety of perspectives of organizational culture as
management function versus an organization-wide
knowledge asset; and illuminate the viewpoints
of organizational culture as the role of external
forces in shaping organizations versus internal
forces of organizational culture having an effect
upon how we serve our patrons. Many of these
programs do not address organizational culture
or group dynamics in any of the course description offerings. Of those that do, the majority are
part of management or information organizations
courses. This brief sampling (Table 1) covers the
course descriptions of these programs and does
not entail a review of the syllabi for these courses.
It is assumed that the course descriptions provide
a summary view of the normative orientation of
the programs.
These courses, like the literature, reflect a
traditional approach to organizational culture
in library and information science curricula
which emphasizes leadership as a function of
management. Newer concepts and approaches
209
UnderstandIng
organIzatIonal cUltUre and
groUP dynaMIcs In relatIon
to recrUItMent, deVeloPMent,
and retentIon of InforMatIon
ProfessIonals IssUes,
controVersIes, and ProBleMs
As is seen from the review of the literature and the
library and information science curricula examples, the focus of organizations and organizational
culture is couched in the area of management or
in the understanding of the role of information
organizations in society. What is lacking in these
examples is the value that understanding organizational culture and group dynamics at every level
is a key component to effectively participating in
organizations regardless of the type of organization
or place within it. This is not just a management or
an information organization issue, but it is about
existence and living daily life in an organization
of any sort.
210
211
To create links to the organization, an organizational culture which actively fosters healthy
relationships can be used. For example, Lee,
Holtom, and Mitchell (2006) suggest investing
in technologies which keep mentors and mentees
connected online when face-to-face meetings are
not possible (p. 323). This could include permitting the use of instant messenger programs or
wiki software to facilitate immediate feedback or
knowledge building between individuals. At the
authors institution, each library department holds
Getting to Know You sessions every few years
to educate each other about the roles and functions
of individuals and the units in which they work.
This exercise creates a link for individuals between
how all parts of the organization fit together to
achieve organizational goals.
A final way Lee, Holtom, and Mitchell (2006)
suggest that organizations can control for job embeddedness is to create benefits which would be
considered sacrifices if an employee were to leave
an organization. While financial rewards are an
obvious benefit employers can provide, other, less
costly benefits can include an organizational culture which places value in other types of benefits.
Examples may include treating employees with the
normative orientation of distributed leadership as a
positive value. Another example is for employees
to have the opportunity to serve on committees
or boards which make decisions about the roles
and services of the organization. Training offerings and skill-building is another way to invest
in employees and to invest in the organization at
the same time. Returning to the Aquinas College
example, all library employees receive membership into the regional library association to help
with networking and professional development
opportunities. Travel and professional leave, as is
found in many libraries, is another such example
of creating embeddedness. Using the distributed
leadership model, organizations empower employees to decide or recommend the benefits offered
to employees which are of most help and value to
212
213
214
Library and Information Science Courses with a Focus on Individuals in Relation to Organizational Culture
conclUsIon
Organizational culture and group dynamics shape
the world within which individuals do their work.
As information organizations in the 21st century
seek to recruit, develop, and retain employees, it
is important for these organizations and the people
they hire to be equipped with the knowledge, skills,
and abilities to shape this work environment for
success. This knowledge, skill, and ability can
start with required offerings in the information
and library science curricula and should extend
into the normative orientation of information
professionals within organizations themselves. It
is proposed here that this normative orientation
take on the approach of distributed leadership
to empower information professionals to use an
understanding of ideas such as job embeddedness,
the bad apple concept, and positive relationships at
215
work to influence organizational culture. Information professionals who are empowered with this
information will be better equipped for successful,
rewarding careers in healthy workplaces which
are prepared to take information organizations
forward in the 21st century.
references
Adyoyin, S. O. (2006, Spring). Managing the
librarys corporate culture for organizational
efficiency, productivity, and enhanced service.
Library Philosophy and Practice, 8(2), 114.
American Library Association (ALA). (2008a).
ALA accredited programs. Retrieved December
9, 2008 from http://www.ala.org/ala/educationcareers/education/accreditedprograms/index.cfm
American Library Association (ALA). (2008b).
Standards for accreditation of masters programs
in library & information studies. Retrieved
December 9, 2008 from http://www.ala.org/ala/
educationcareers/education/accreditedprograms/
standards/standards_2008.pd f Anderson, E.
(2006). Growing great employees: Turning ordinary people into extraordinary performers. New
York: Penguin.
Dominican University, Graduate School of Library and Information Science. (2009). Course
descriptions. Retrieved January 26, 2009 from
http://www.dom.edu/academics/gslis/programs/
course- descriptions.html.
DrexelUniversity.(2009).TheiSchoolatDrexelUniversity. Retrieved January 3, 2009 from http://www.
ischool.drexel.edu/Home/Academics/CourseDescriptions/Course?sorter=&courseID=7
Dutton, J. E., & Ragins, B. R. (2007). Moving
forward: Positive relationships at work as a
research frontier. In J.E. Dutton & B.R. Ragins
(Eds.), Exploring Positive Relationships at Work:
Building a Theoretical and Research Foundation.
Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Florida State University. (2009). College of information masters and specialist degrees. Retrieved
January 3, 2009 from http://www.ci.fsu.edu/
Graduate/Graduate_Courses/Masters_and_Specialist/5400.asp
Kahn, W. H. (2007). Commentary: Positive relationships in groups and communities. In J.E.
Dutton & B.R. Ragins (Eds.), Exploring Positive
Relationships at Work: Building a Theoretical and
Research Foundation. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates.
Blackwell, J. (2007, July). Building collaboration using a distributed leadership model within
a library team. Retrieved April 14, 2009 from
http://www.slanza.org.nz/Conference%202007/
Janet%20Blackwell.ppt
216
217
218
Chapter 13
aBstract
Library success is a direct result of staff quality, engagement, and satisfaction. Careful selection and
training of library staff and commitment to their growth are essential to staff retention, which bears
directly on organizational effectiveness. Regardless of the type of library, accountability for outcomes
has increased, placing greater importance on the quality of staff appointments, employee skills development, and how staff melds into a team in the work place. The cycle of employee excellence is fueled when
supervisors provide challenges, opportunities, and recognition relevant to individual work styles. The
authors describe the importance of effective recruitment and supervision to staff retention by discussing
effective leadership characteristics, outlining the need for a supervisory commitment to ongoing employee training and motivation, and providing suggestions for building successful supervisor-employee
relationships in libraries.
IntrodUctIon
As libraries continue to evolve to meet changing user
expectations, a key component of the re-visioning
process is staff hiring, training, and retention. As
Terrence Mech points out, personnel are a critical
resource for professional activity because the quality
of work produced by an organization depends on the
qualities of those hired (Mech, 1989, p. 63).
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-601-8.ch013
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BacKgroUnd
Staff resources are a vital library ingredient and
there are many articles in the literature that discuss the importance of recruitment and retention.
During the research process for this chapter, the
authors found articles in both management and
library literature that provide useful guidance on
effective hiring practices, supervisory techniques,
and retention strategies. Gregory Raschke has
neatly summed up just how crucial a quality staff
is to a librarys relevance: The ability to attract,
recruit, and hire top candidates is the hallmark of
a successful . library (Raschke, 2003, p. 53).
Indeed, hiring well is consistently emphasized in
the literature. Bringing the wrong person into a
position is a misstep that can cost dearly. Worse
yet, the problem is completely avoidable (Bos,
2008, p. 28). The literature emphasizes good
communication with candidates during the hiring
process so that both sides are interviewing each
other (Bos, 2008, p. 28). Patricia Moore states that
an applicants attraction to a position is frequently
based on perception and when not asking about
the organizations culture outright, the applicant
is most likely scanning the environment to see
if the culture is desirable (Moore, 2008, p. 71).
Moore goes on to state that during the interview,
candidates quickly get a sense whether or not they
will fit into the organization and if their opinions
and knowledge will be respected and valued
(Moore, 2008, p. 71).
The literature also demonstrates the importance of sound orientation and training once an
employee is hired. An orientation is your opportunity to engage new employees and make them
productive from day one (Davies, 2008, p. 8).
219
220
Keys to success
Regardless of the type of library, managers should
take a proactive stance toward recruitment and
management. Each step of the process -- describing the need, recruiting for the position, assessing
candidates, hiring, integrating, and assessing new
employees -- contributes to successful supervisory relationships. Retaining the best employees
is essential to providing the value that users and
governing boards expect. The remainder of this
chapter will describe proactive,strategies for
hiring well
A key factor for effective retention is hiring
well. As Raschke indicates, the ability to attract,
recruit, and hire the best candidates is a recurring
characteristic of successful libraries (Raschke,
2003, p. 53). But because the candidate is usually
observing his or her best behavior for the event,
even the most carefully planned interview process
provides only a brief snapshot of the applicants
skills and assets. As such, successful hiring requires a great deal of attention to the interview
process and insight into the interactions that take
place between the supervisors, search committee
members, and candidate.
Hiring well means that managers must clearly
communicate all the requirements of an available
position, cast the net broadly enough to attract
the best candidates, make smart choices about
the membership of the search committee, pose
questions that allow effective assessments of
candidate credentials, and adhere to an efficient
timeline for the committee to do its work.
Library managers and staff devote a considerable amount of time to the hiring process. When an
incumbent leaves a position, existing employees
know it may be many months before another individual is appointed (Frank, Nicholson, Dickson, &
Miller, 2000). Therefore, it is important that library
administrators and supervisors focus on retention
and utilize the most efficient and effective search
process to minimize the impact of such situations.
Library managers need to be willing to let go of
traditional ideas, perceptions, and practices to
make room for better ones to ensure a successful
search process outcome.
Be Clear
Understand the needs of the position being advertised and the credentials that would best suit
Be Quick
Use electronic resources to speed the dissemination
of the advertisement and receipt of applications
for the position. Electronic recruitment reduces
cost and speeds receipt of applications, review of
candidate dossiers, and assessment of references.
Promote online applications if possible and encourage those serving as references to make use
of email or fax to expedite receipt of their letters.
Keep the search committee membership small in
number to maintain the quality of decision making
while improving committee efficiency.
Be Communicative
Communicate with applicants frequently. In
many library searches, candidates are ignored
and left wondering about the status of the search.
The authors experiences indicate that one of the
biggest complaints from applicants is the lack
of news about the status of their application.
Candidates may receive a postcard indicating
221
Be Consistent
Provide a common message. Tell candidates similar things about the organization and the position.
Make sure they are equally informed and that each
is treated in the same manner. Posing a common
set of questions to the finalists will help assess
their capacity for contributing to the organization
in a uniform manner. Tailor questions to reflect the
specific position for which the library is recruiting. There are evaluative and social components
222
Be Caring
Treat interviewees as guests. Make sure they have
a host. Ask if anyone will be traveling with them
and offer to include some plans for that person. A
family member will often have an impact on the
candidates acceptance or rejection of a job offer.
Provide the candidate with advance information
about the position, the library, and the community
and offer to answer any questions or address any
concerns.
It is important to remember that when applicants are considering jobs openings, they are
frequently motivated not only by the position
but by a host of other external factors such as
geographic location, family situation, schools,
and proximity to cultural events. When candidates are engaged in the interview process, it is
important that the hiring manager and members
of the search committee be prepared to discuss
and offer information in these areas as needed.
Certainly, it is inappropriate and indeed illegal
for an employer to ask personal questions of a
candidate, but search committee members will
need to be sensitive to issues raised by the interviewee that highlight areas of personal concern.
Asking open-ended questions during the process,
such as What attracts you to this position? often
results in a response that provides useful information about personal concerns. Another significant
factor affecting a candidates decision is the employability of a trailing spouse. If an employer is
able to assist the spouse with securing leads for
relevant positions, this too can help attract the
candidate to the organization.
Building relationships
Hiring well is only the first step in developing
and maintaining an effective employee retention
strategy. Joanna Posner states that understanding and satisfying employees underlying needs
plays a vital role in helping employers hire and
retain valuable employees (Posner, 2008, p. 52).
Effective supervisors care for their hires by learning what they need and continuing to listen for
what motivates them. Posner also states that the
number one reason people leave a company is
a bad relationship, or no relationship, with their
boss (Posner, 2008, p. 52). While a supervisor
does not need to be everyones dearest friend,
employees must perceive their supervisor as
credible and supportive. Supervisors who possess
good listening skills and view their employees as
individuals, not just another cog in the organizations wheel, will find greater success in building
collaborative working relationships with and
among their employees. It is the synergy from
these relationships that contributes to the overall
success of the organization.
223
Uncovering resources
Another crucial component of the orientation
phase is briefing new employees on access to programs, funds, and other mechanisms that exist to
support their efforts to achieve success: things like
research funding, professional travel assistance,
and paid leaves of absence. It is important to clearly
convey the policies and procedures governing
access to and use of these funds. Employees who
are aware that support is available for their work
projects, skills development, and professional
initiatives often remained satisfied.
224
225
226
continual commitment
Effective leaders hire well, develop an understanding and awareness of each employees
unique work style and characteristics, and seek
and assign challenges suited to the success of the
employee and the organization. As stated above,
an effective supervisor maintains an ongoing
rewarding Performance
As crucial to employee success as the provision,
support, and encouragement of ongoing training is
the supervisors recognition of a job well done.
Employees thrive when they are rewarded and
recognized. Not only is it important for an employer to express appreciation for an employees
work, it is also important for the employee to
know that others in the organization are aware of
the contributions that they have made. Obviously,
employee rewards improve overall morale and
retention, but recognition and rewards often mean
different things to different individuals.
Successful rewarding is based upon accurately identifying factors that motivate employees
(Verespej, 1999, p. 14). While verbal recognition
can go a long way, non-monetary and monetary
rewards are also important to employee retention.
While some employees may desire opportunities
to travel and learn new skills that could benefit
them and the organization, others may be more
receptive to cash bonus incentives. Still others
might jump at the opportunity for on-site child
care and extra vacation days (Workforce management, 2006, p. 2).
Providing feedback
Employees need to know what is expected of
them and how they are doing. In order to accomplish this, supervisors should develop a general
set of duties for each position, annual goals, and
a mechanism for assessing progress. An annual
work plan developed by the employee and supervisor will help establish a mutually agreeable
set of activities to be undertaken over the year.
Changes can and should be addressed mid-year
and as circumstances warrant. With such a process
in place, there should be no surprises when the
annual performance review takes place. This process of providing regular feedback to employees
throughout the year informs them about how they
are doing, keeps the lines of communication open,
227
228
conclUsIon
Hiring the right people, providing the mentoring
they require, and developing an understanding
of their individual needs will improve employee
performance and enhance retention. This means
that library managers should provide a welcoming
climate, interesting work, effective supervisory
relationships, useful networking opportunities,
and access to beneficial continuing education.
In such a supportive environment new staff can
then make a distinct and positive impact, spread
a culture of excellence to others, and strengthen
the organization.
Still, library managers need to recognize that
even with the most dedicated hiring, mentoring,
and reward structures, an organization cannot keep
every good employee. Libraries will always, for
whatever reason, have excellent staff who will
want to seek opportunities elsewhere. It is one
of the challenges supervisors face. Supervisors
cannot meet every need or provide for every opportunity or benefit, as employees may seek higher
pay, more responsibility, or work locations closer
to family or cultural opportunities. However, for
those organizations that develop and nurture a
culture of excellence, their programs and initiatives will still move forward. New staff will be
hired and the best of them will continue to add to
the quality of the library.
The sustainability of every organization is
based heavily on the investment supervisors are
willing to make in enhancing their employees
ability to succeed. Each employee, regardless of
generation, work style, external factors, or technological advancements, must feel valued as an
integral part of the organization. If library managers take to heart Sayers suggestion to value the
individual in word and deed, then the hiring,
training, and mentoring process will fuel a cycle
of employee excellence in libraries and enhance
organizational stability (Sayers, 2007, 484).
references
Oud, J. (2008). Adjusting to the workplace: transitions faced by new academic librarians. College
& Research Libraries, 69(3), 256.
Posner, J. (2008). No more revolving door. Training (New York, N.Y.), 45(6), 50.
229
addItIonal readIng
Association of College and Research Libraries
Ad Hoc Task Force on Recruitment & Retention Issues. (2002). Recruitment, Retention, and
Restructuring: Human Resources in Academic
Libraries. Chicago: Association of College and
Research Libraries.
Birdsall, D. G. (1991). Recruiting academic
librarians: how to find and hire the best candidates. Journal of Academic Librarianship, 17,
276283.
Block, P. (2008). Nothing is next. OD Practitioner,
40(4), 3537.
Carr, J. C., Boyar, S. L., & Gregory, B. T. (2008).
The moderating effect of work-family centrality on
Work-family conflict, organizational attitudes, and
turnover behavior. Journal of Management, 34(2),
244262. doi:10.1177/0149206307309262
230
Stanley, R. (2008). Weaving workplace flexibility into the fabric of business. Employee Benefit
News.
Strong, M. (2008). Give gen Y-ers a reason to stay
at your agency. Advertising Age, 79(14), 24.
Sullivan, J. (2008). Retain and sustain. PM Network, 22(5), S28S29.
Survey finds recruitment and retention the top
issues facing employers. (Spring 2001). Library
Personnel News, 14(2), 8.
Townsend, M., Christian, B., Hague, J., Peck, D.,
Ray, M., & Yeganeh, B. (2008). OD gets wired.
OD Practitioner, 40(4), 6265.
Wilder, S. J. (1996). Generational change and
the niche for librarians. Journal of Academic
Librarianship, 22, 385386. doi:10.1016/S00991333(96)90091-9
Williamson, J. M., Pemberton, A. F., & Loundsbury, J. W. (2005). An investigation of career and
job satisfaction in relation to personality traits of
information professionals. The Library Quarterly,
75(2), 122141. doi:10.1086/431330
231
aPPendIX a
saMPle InterVIew schedUle
45 minutes: General information session with personnel librarians and tour of facility
30 minutes: Meeting with the director
45 minutes: Meeting with the head of the unit
30 minutes: Break. (This can be set up as time to be alone or with others in the unit. It should be a more
relaxed period of time.)
45 minutes: Presentation. (Some position interviews benefit from a candidate presentation, particularly
those openings that require bibliographic instruction. It is a good idea to place the presentation in
the morning, after the candidate gains some perspective but before he/she is worn out from worry.
Time should be provided to make sure everything works before staff arrives.)
30 minutes: Meeting with the staff in the unit
1 1/2 hours: Lunch. (This can be an opportunity for others to meet the candidate but efforts should be
made to keep it from being an interview. It should have a more relaxed feel. Ensure adequate
time for getting to lunch, being served, and returning.)
45 minutes: Search Committee
30 minutes: Follow up with the director (This can be the director or the head of the unit but it is good to
have a second meeting with a key administrator to allow reflection on the day and to answer any
questions that have arisen during the interview.)
1 hour: Tour of town. (Candidates are frequently interested in the city where the library resides. This
provides an opportunity to see some of the highlights of the community.)
appendix B
candidate assessment form
Name __________________________________________ Ranking ____________
(1=Highest, 2=medium, 3=weak)
edUcatIon
ALA MLS? Yes______ No ______ Institution ______________________________
Other _______________________ Institution_____________________________________
232
Subject background (if this position requires one, such as natural science)
Ability to create web pages/tutorials
Ability to work creatively/cooperatively in team environment
coMMents
Date_______________
appendix c
sample Interview Questions
Interview questions should be tailored to address such issues as education, work history, job performance,
career goals, leadership, communication characteristics, flexibility, creativity, and interest in life-long
learning. Questions pertaining to leadership characteristics will not be germane to all interviews.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
233
17. Leadership Describe a long-term project you planned for your department.
18. Describe your current research interests.
19. Are you interested in pursuing additional education such as another degree, and if so, in what
area?
appendix d
Performance appraisal
I. Purpose
Performance appraisal is an important part of staff development, helping to strengthen the quality of an
individuals work and enhance library service. The evaluation process clarifies how well staff carry out
their responsibilities, explains what is expected of them, and provides concrete guidance for improvement
where needed. Specifically, the process is intended to provide a systematic framework for documenting
performance by serving to:
II. Methodology
A. Responsibility
Staff performance appraisal is carried out by the supervisor and the director. Staff are expected to present
factual information for the performance review.
Regular dialogue should be maintained throughout the year. The formal evaluation should contain
no surprises as to expectations or judgment on performance. Rather, it should serve to document what
is already known and to facilitate honest dialogue. While the process calls for annual reviews, formal
written evaluations may be completed more often as circumstances warrant.
B. Preparation
It is important to be well prepared for the evaluation and to establish an environment of respect and
open communication.
The performance appraisal should be based upon the stated position responsibilities, the years
accomplishments, and the work plan. It should include a review of the current description of responsibilities, an assessment of the staff members performance, and attention to concerns with individual
234
contributions or changes in the work plan. Comments on personality, behavior, and similar matters are
appropriate only when they relate to job performance.
C. Evaluation Instrument
The library staff performance appraisal form may consist of the following parts:
Part 1: Staff Activities
Activities undertaken in library and professional service for the year.
Part 2: Performance Assessment
Criteria for the evaluation and the supervisors assessment of the staff members performance.
Part 3: Work Plan
Goals for the coming year, the distribution of work between the major areas of the job assignment, and
the support structure for performance.
Part 4: Adjustments
Alterations to the workplan or performance issues requiring formal attention during the year.
III. Process
Staff should be evaluated annually. The evaluation is carried out by the supervisor through the performance appraisal process and is based upon evidence of performance. Staff are judged as to their degree of
cooperation with colleagues and commitment to programs and patrons in all areas of their assignment.
A. Responsibility
All staff should update their job description and prepare a work plan annually. Those undergoing performance appraisal should complete an individual report of their major activities and a proposed work
plan for the following year (Parts 1 & 3). Supervisors can then complete staff evaluations (Part 2) and,
with the staff member, the work plan for the coming year (Part 3), consistent with goals and objectives
of the department and the library.
The assessment (part 2 of the evaluation) and the individual activities report (part 1) are sent to the
director. Final copies of the appraisal are sent to the staff member, supervisor, director, and staff members personnel file.
A mid-year assessment may be performed at any time to review the work plan, address changes to
responsibilities, or focus on areas of performance that need improvement. This review is sent to the
director with copies provided to the supervisor, staff member, and personnel file.
235
When a staff member is found to be performing at a less than satisfactory level, a plan for improvement will be developed.
C. Access to Evaluations
Staff appraisals are retained as part of the personnel file. Access to the evaluation is restricted to the staff
member, the supervisor, the human resources librarian, and the director.
D. Confidentiality
The evaluation process and information about the evaluation should be treated as confidentially as possible within the context of the process.
236
237
Chapter 14
aBstract
Formal mentoring programs, whether occurring in profit making organizations or existing within nonprofits, have had a colorful history. Many professionals have been involved as a mentor, a mentee, or
else have known individuals who were involved in a mentoring program. Whether participating on an
informal basis, or engaged formally in a program arranged by an organization, not everyone who has
experienced a mentoring program has a success story to tell. Based on that observation, and data collected from mentoring program failures, program challenges and successes, and research into current
literature, the purpose of this chapter is to highlight a mentoring model created to assist organizations
with their attempt to encourage the successful development, retention, and recruitment of professions
into their organization. With this in mind, the search for the perfect mentoring model continues.
IntrodUctIon
The heart of a formal mentoring program is the
relationship between the mentor and mentee.
What has become apparent both through survey
data analysis, observation and actual experience
is that if the partners in a mentoring relationship
are not compatible, the structure of the program
is weakened. Due to this focused importance of a
strong base, a mentoring model has been created
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-601-8.ch014
Copyright 2010, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited.
BacKgroUnd
In order to better comprehend this particular mentoring model, there are a few points that need to be
understood. The first critical piece relating to the
acceptance of this particular model as it unfolds
is the existence of a mentoring definition and
the mandatory acceptance and agreement of this
meaning by all who have a role in this programs
process. Depending on the field (teaching, nursing,
business management, government, etc.) the roles
of the participants, especially that of the mentor
are varied. A few examples of these roles include
mentors assuming the role of models, counselors,
advisors, teachers, nurturers, friends, and sponsors. Other organizations choose to add descriptors such as experienced and trusted advisor, or
a protector that guides and supports. In any case,
this created model suggests that mentors serve
as a nurturing, role model; they teach, sponsor,
encourage, counsel and befriend; they promote
professional and/or personal development; and
that there exists an ongoing, caring relationship
between the mentor and protg (Anderson &
Shannon, 1995, p.29).
The second point necessary to this models acceptance is the acknowledgement that mentoring
can indeed serve as a viable career development
strategy for individuals as well as becoming an
employee recruitment and retention organizational
strategy. Regardless of the organization, succession is a fundamental administrative component
238
theoretIcal concePts
of the created Model
Purpose of the Model
This model is primarily built based on the creation,
development, survey analysis, and observation
of three mentoring programs. This author has
239
Model development
Knowing that the three programs described above
are foremost in the models design, it needs to be
said that this model is in its developmental draft
stage. Data is being analyzed from those three
programs; SSLLI is completed, LLAMA is just
wrapping up its pilot year, and the mentoring portion of PELSC will not be through until 2010. As
a result any data here given has been pulled from
the SSLLI final survey, LLAMA mid-way and final
surveys, and PELSCs mid-way survey.
Also needing to be said about this models
development is an explanation of its name - The
evolutionary conscious approach to formal mentoring. The idea behind this concept is that the
partners assess their own personalities and thus
learn how they fit into the scheme of things, and
how they interact with others. At the orientation
they share their types and as a result learn how
to understand their partners, their points of view,
and their motivations. In a matter of speaking,
these individuals begin to grow and evolve not
only individually but as contributing partners
in a mentoring relationship. This understanding
of one another helps the partners to consciously
contribute to the evolution of a successful partnership which is the foundation of the formal
mentoring program.
Model components
The created mentoring model of a formal mentoring program consists of four parts or components.
Each of these four components is designed as a
focal point because these are the primary areas
that weaknesses and challenges to the success
240
2.
3.
4.
The Enneagram
In order to grasp how important this step is, the
necessity arises to perhaps digress and briefly
explain this personality analysis. The enneagram
is considered to be not only one of the oldest ((4th
century A.D.) but one of the most popular modern
tools for understanding human personality. (Riso &
Hudson, 1999, p.9. It is shown as a geometric figure
that maps out the nine fundamental personality
types of human nature and their complex inter-
Emotional types: Come from the heart energy; emotionally based people. They are:
Type Three Mr. /Mrs. Success the need to achieve, succeed and impress; and
241
A presentation about the enneagram is delivered to the participants at the orientation session.
This provides an explanation of the history of this
ancient personality typing system. In addition,
using the enneagram analysis, each participant
begins to assess themselves according to one of the
nine personality types. This involves the sharing
of the partners types with one another as well as
with the full group.
The enneagram personality assessment is
highly suggested by this model in order to assist
242
The integral piece of this second model component is the role that the coordinator(s) assume.
Linda Phillips-Jones (2003) provides a list of items
that the participants of the program should expect
the coordinator to provide. A few of the major ones
that she mentions are: keep confidences shared,
be a sounding board on the mentoring effort and
the relationship; help resolve conflicts if needed;
be a liaison among decision makers, the overseeing task force, and the participants; and provide
ongoing suggestions and ideas of how to manage
the partnership (p. 7).
As evidenced by the list, the coordinators role
involves a critical, regular, ongoing communication process with the pairs. In the case of SSLLI,
the coordinator related to both the mentors and
mentees on a regular (monthly) basis by sending quotes, suggesting pertinent articles, or just
inquiring how things are going. With LLAMA,
the communication plan was to have the liaisons
asking hows it going in between the mid-way
and final surveys. And with the PELSC participants, the relationships were set to work with little
interference from the coordinator, since each of the
students also had a faculty advisor. However, in
this case the participants knew that the coordinator
did exist in case of need.
Of the examples given from the three programs, the model created suggests using whatever
works best, with the critical point being that the
coordinator(s) subscribes to the following best
practices to encourage success:
1.
2.
3.
4.
note the enneagram types for each partnership to help ensure appropriate communicative approaches;
make a plan ahead of time and communicate
to the partners how often they will be hearing
from the coordinator;
let the partners know what type of communication that they can reasonably expect;
and
stick to a plan.
243
There are many other administrative responsibilities that the coordinator assumes in the
mentoring process. Given below are four of these
additional administrative areas that the created
mentoring model focuses on and ones in which the
coordinator must assume an active role: goals and
objectives, timelines, variables, and pitfalls.
244
Timeline
A second administrative responsibility of the coordinator is to set the time line for the program.
Based on observations made of SSLLI, LLAMA,
and PELSC, this model suggests that this program
run for 12 months with the partners meeting only
for 10 (this includes the orientation session). For
the full period of 12 months, the program needs to
include initial planning time, time for data collection, analysis, feedback, and executive reporting
on the administrative side, while making sure that
the natural progression of the mentoring relationship is being mapped. In the case of SSLLI and
LLAMA, a 10-month program worked well simply
Variables
With the administration of a mentoring program,
the coordinator needs to be aware of a third responsibility which is the knowledge of a multitude of
variables which, depending on how they are used,
can either help or hinder the programs success.
The mentoring model acknowledges the existence
of these variables which are in all four basic areas
of the formal mentoring program: matching process, participator analysis, the length of program,
and the evaluation process. The listing of these
four areas actually presents a basic summary of
the models suggested procedures discussed up to
this point. In fact, three of the four of these areas
have already been mentioned in this chapter:
matching process, participator analysis, and the
length of program.
In the first area, which is the matching process,
variables exist relative to the technique used for
Pitfalls
The fourth administrative responsibility of the
coordinator is to be cognizant of four cautionary
areas or pitfalls. The first is the established purpose of the mentoring program. As an example,
just because a staff person may have had an idea,
received a grant, or needed to produce a program,
perhaps a mentoring program was established
without establishing organizational need. Securing
a mentoring program may have appeared to be
a good idea, but in actuality becomes a purpose
with money instead of the other way around. The
second pitfall is a lack of a continuous buy-in by
the primary stakeholders. Parties involved are
absorbed by the newness of the project at the
beginning, but as time progresses a lack of interest prevails. In various observations of programs,
at the initiation stage, there exists a bright, new,
shiny, career development idea channeled into a
mentoring program. As time progresses, interest
weans, and communication becomes less often
between the organization and the pairs, who many
times are left alone to fend for themselves. At this
point, if these partners have had the enneagram
self analysis, they should be able to continue on
with relatively small organizational involvement.
If not, this weakness will tend to crack the very
foundation of the program. A third pitfall involves
the coordinator. The coordination and motivational
factors that were first introduced concerning this
program may then become secondary to other
programs, again leaving the partners to themselves
245
for long periods of time without reinforcing efforts. Incidences can also occur where the initial
coordinator might assume a position elsewhere
and the incoming mentor program coordinator
appointee may have a lesser amount of interest
in the program. In any case, what could occur is
an eventual lack of commitment. The fourth and
final pitfall involves taking shortcuts. Shortcuts
can and have happened in: the matching process
where the partners choose whomever they wish
with no qualifying backgrounds; the coordination process where the partners go for months
without any communication from the organization; the length of the program where no time
limit is set, thus letting the mentoring program
run until it wears itself out; and the evaluation
process, where only one survey is administered
to the partners, thus creating little opportunity for
the construction of comparison benchmarks for
success measurement.
component three:
Program evaluation
In a formal mentoring program where goals and
objectives, output measures, and participant outcomes are measured, the evaluation component
is a necessity. According to the model, this component is a critical piece built to assess success
of the program and to assist with the programs
sustainability.
As a part of this component, the use of forms
is critical. There are a variety of these that have
been published and are available for purchase on
the market. Many times, the coordinators own
creation suits the organizations program best.
The model recommends that the coordinator
use initial signed contracts for each participant,
goal and objective forms, and outcome measure
sheets (Phillips-Jones, 2003). However, there are
also additional forms that the coordinator needs
to incorporate at the very start of the mentoring
program, specifically in the partnering process.
These can include mentor or mentee candidate
246
247
248
references
Anderson, E. M., & Shannon, A. L. (1995). Toward
a conceptualization of mentoring. In T. Kerry &
A. S. Mayes (Eds.), Issues in mentoring (p. 29),
New York: Routledge.
Armstrong, S. J., Allinson, C. W., & Hays, J.
(2002). Formal mentoring systems: An examination of the effects of mentor/protg cognitive
styles on the mentoring process. Journal of Management Studies, 39(8), 1129. doi:10.1111/14676486.00326
addItIonal readIng
Allen, T. D., & Eby, L. T. (2007).The Blackwell
handbook of mentoring a multiple perspectives
approach. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing.
Armstrong, S. J., Allinson, C. W., & Hayes, J.
(2002). Formal mentoring systems: An examination of the effects of mentor/protg cognitive styles on the mentoring process. Journal
of Management Studies, 39(8), 11111137.
doi:10.1111/1467-6486.00326
Barnett, J. E. (2008). Mentoring, boundaries, and
multiple relationships: Opportunities and challenges. Mentoring & Tutoring: Partnership in Learning,
16(1), 36. doi:10.1080/13611260701800900
Burke, R. J., & McKeen, C. A. (1997). Not every
managerial woman who makes it has a mentor.
Women in Management Review, 12(4), 139.
doi:10.1108/09649429710171163
Chungliang, A. H., & Lynch, J. (1995). Mentoring: The TAO of giving and receiving wisdom.
San Francisco: Harper.
Clutterbuck, D., & Lane, G. (2004). The situational
mentor: An international review of competencies
and capabilities in mentoring. Aldershot, UK:
Gower.
Connor, M., & Pokora, J. (2007). Coaching and
mentoring at work: developing effective practice.
Maidenhead, UK: Open University Press.
249
250
251
Chapter 15
aBstract
Supportive mentors and supervisors are vital components in the career success of new librarians. The
mentor relationship is generally in addition to the more formalized relationship between the new librarian and her or his supervisor. These are, inherently, two separate roles. These disparate roles, however,
do intersect. When each role is taken up by a different individual, there is a possibility that there may be
some tension or anxiety on the part of the supervisor regarding the mentors influence. When the roles
of mentor and supervisor combine in one person the mentor-protg relationship may conflict with supervisory obligations. In this chapter, this potential tension and anxiety between the roles of mentor and
supervisor is explored. The roles of both mentor and supervisor are pivotal in the development of new
professionals. A closer examination of how these roles intersect and influence each other will provide
insight into how these relationships come together and shape professional careers.
IntrodUctIon
Current literature directed towards new librarians
focuses on a variety of different methods that they
can employ to help them learn about and assimilate
in their new working environment or their new
profession. Rachel Singer Gordon, for example,
devotes an entire chapter in The Nextgen LibrarDOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-601-8.ch015
Copyright 2010, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited.
252
part of the conversations that support the mentoring relationship. A good mentoring relationship
frequently provides a safe environment for the
airing of doubts or questions about organizational
direction. The purpose of the mentoring role is the
development of one individual, the protg, and
that development may or may not be aligned with
organizational goals. There is no formal position
description for the mentor and no formal evaluation; it is a de facto assessment, established by
the continuation of the relationship.
Focus
The focus of the supervisory relationship is
on the contribution the employee makes to the
mission and goals of the employer. Attention to
the behavior and development of any individual
employee functions within boundaries set by the
organization. The need to focus resources on
the organizational goals means that investment
in training and development will always be for
activities that ultimately benefit the organization.
Performance issues and opportunities are only
relevant within that organizational context. Issues
that occur in the workplace are the main focus of
the supervisory relationship. The supervisory relationship only exists as long as the organizational
structure does not change.
The mentoring relationship, however, is much
broader. Issues to be addressed are as far-reaching
as the individuals involved want or are comfortable with. The agenda of the relationship is very
flexible and themes and topics can wax and wane,
only limited by the participants. Many mentoring
relationships explore larger career and professional
issues, which may or may not be linked to the current employment of either partner. Professional
development in the broadest sense is one potential
goal of the mentor-protg relationship. Discussions may include interpersonal issues, relating
to how the individual being mentored relates to
other people, including a direct supervisor or
other person in their workplace to improving
253
Boundaries
The boundaries of the supervisor role are quite
clearly defined, generally supported by both institutional rules and legislation. The relationship
is appropriately limited to activities that occur
in the workplace or are directly related to it. To
maintain a neutral environment for performance
management, many supervisors remain somewhat emotionally distant from the people they
supervise. Personal matters are generally not
within the purview of the supervisors attention
and will be referred to appropriate departments in
the organization. In contrast, the boundaries of the
mentoring relationship are set by the participants
and often include conversations that are much
more personal than would normally occur with a
supervisor. The boundaries may be described as
being quite porous, shifting as the relationship
develops. It is not unusual, for example, for a
mentor to provide support in situations where
an individuals personal life and professional
life intersect, or where an individual is trying to
make a career decision that will occur outside of
the current employment situation.
Nature of Relationship
A supervisory relationship, circumscribed as it is
by institutional rules and legislation, tends to be
quite formal. Written records are kept, and there
is an assessment by one person, the supervisor,
254
Choice
Perhaps the most striking and important different
between a mentoring relationship and a supervisory relationship is the way in which those relationships are created. A supervisory relationship
is defined by the organization; people do not have
the freedom to choose their supervisors, nor do
supervisors have the freedom to decline a supervisory relationship with an individual. Personal
compatibility is not one of the criteria for assigning supervisors. The relationship starts and ends
according to a timetable set by the employer a
transfer of either individual necessarily changes
the nature of the relationship.
A mentoring relationship is almost entirely
a matter of choice on the part of both individuals. Even in organizations where mentors are
assigned, it is generally permissible for either
partner to decline, either overtly or passively by
not participating. Mentors are often sought for their
perceived ability to understand what an individual
is experiencing, and may choose to develop the
relationship when they are approached, decline
255
degree of organizational commitment when compared to their colleagues who were not mentored
(Payne & Huffman, 2005). In addition, employees/
protgs whose mentor was also their supervisor
demonstrated higher affective commitment than
employees/protgs with non-supervisor mentors.
This may reflect the ability of non-supervisory
mentors to be more critical of the organization.
These findings led Payne and Huffman to wonder
to what extent should mentoring be a requirement of supervisors and considered a part of their
job-related roles and responsibilities? (p. 165).
They argue, however, that mentoring should not
be made a requirement of supervisors because
perceptions regarding mentoring responsibilities
will vary from one supervisor to the next and from
organization to organization.
Although Payne and Huffmans research did
suggest that combining the supervisor and mentor
roles in one person could benefit the organization by creating higher affective commitment in
employees/protgs, their study did not address
the potential impact that combining these roles
would have on the individual protg/employee.
Traditional mentor-protg relationships are
entered into voluntarily by both the protg and
the mentor. Kram (1985) identified two distinct
function categories of mentoring: career functions
and psychological functions. Career functions include sponsorship, exposure and visibility, coaching, protection, and challenging assignments.
Psychological functions include role modeling,
acceptance and confirmation, counseling, and
friendship. These functions work in a variety of
ways to support individual development; however,
the mentoring relationship at its core is a mutually enhancing relationship for both mentor and
protg. The protg gains advice and support
entirely focused on their needs or personal directions, while the mentor gains positive feedback,
often in the form of respect and recognition. The
supervisor-employee relationship, on the other
hand, is not a relationship entered into voluntarily
by either party as it is primarily a product of an
256
organizations structure. For the most part, supervisors are responsible for the professional activities
of more than one person. Their responsibility is
not primarily to the employee, but rather to the
organization.
These competing responsibilities are the reason
why new professionals benefit from having both
a mentor and a supervisor. A supervisor who also
acts as a mentor will certainly be able to provide
the career functions of mentoring, as these are
often aligned with the overall directions of the
organization, which is her or his primary responsibility. The psychological functions of mentoring can become complicated in the supervisory
relationship as conflicting priorities created by
organizational responsibilities and the need to treat
all members of a department equally can interfere
with the focus on the protgs individual needs
that are the basis of many mentoring relationships.
One of the important functions of mentoring,
friendship may struggle to flourish in the generally emotionally neutral climate of a supervisory
relationship. The research indicates, however,
that having both a mentor and a supervisor has
the potential to provide new professionals with
an incredible amount of support from a variety
of sources. Mentors can provide both career and
psychological functions, while the supervisors
provide organizational support.
In addition to the reasons why it is important
for the roles of supervisor and mentor to be
separate for the benefit of the new professional,
it is also important that these roles be separate
for the supervisor/mentor. The term role, in
organizational behavior literature, can be defined
as a set of expectations applied to the incumbent
of a particular position by the incumbent and by
the role senders within and beyond an organizations boundaries (Van Sell, Brief, & Schuler,
1981, p. 43). Roles are often personalized by the
incumbent so even the same position within the
same organization will be enacted differently by
distinct individuals. Role ambiguity occurs when
individuals are required to play two or more roles
257
258
259
260
261
262
conclUsIon
Mentoring, as a concept and a practice, has become an important part of LIS literature and of
many organizations. New professionals are often
encouraged to seek out mentors to help them with
their career paths and many organizations provide
formal mentoring opportunities. But, as this chapter demonstrated, there are many potential pitfalls
if the roles of mentor and supervisor are held by
one person. The prospect for role dissonance or
ambiguity and the complexities of a multiplex relationship could potentially have a negative impact
on the career development of a new librarian. It
is the opinion of the authors that the best way to
references
Allen, T. D., Eby, L. T., Poteet, M. L., Lentz, E.,
& Lima, L. (2004). Career benefits associated
with mentoring for proteges: A meta-analysis.
The Journal of Applied Psychology, 89, 127136.
doi:10.1037/0021-9010.89.1.127
Booth, R. (1996). Mentor or manager: What is the
difference? A case study in supervisory mentoring.
Leadership and Organization Development Journal,
17(3), 3136. doi:10.1108/01437739610116975
Cox, E. J. (2008). On being a new librarian: Eight
things to keep in mind. One-Person Library, 25,
45.
Dawley, D. D., Andrews, M. C., & Bucklew,
N. S. (2008). Mentoring, supervisor support,
and perceived organizational support: What
matters most? Leadership and Organization Development Journal, 29(3), 235247.
doi:10.1108/01437730810861290
Eisenberger, R., Stinglhamber, F., Vandenberghe,
C., Sucharski, I. L., & Rhoades, L. (2002). Perceived
supervisor support: Contributions to perceived organizational support and employee retention. The
Journal of Applied Psychology, 87(3), 565573.
doi:10.1037/0021-9010.87.3.565
263
264
addItIonal readIng
Aryee, S., & Chay, Y. W. (1994). An examination
of the impact of career-oriented mentoring on
work commitment attitudes and career satisfaction among professional and managerial employees. British Journal of Management, 5(4), 241.
doi:10.1111/j.1467-8551.1994.tb00076.x
Barrett, R. (2002). Mentor supervision and
development - exploration of lived experience.
Career Development International, 7(5), 279283.
doi:10.1108/13620430210440109
Chao, G. T., Walz, P. M., & Gardner, P. D. (1992).
Formal and informal mentorships: A comparison
on mentoring functions and contrast with nonmentored counterparts. Personnel Psychology,
45(3), 619636.
265
Manathunga, C. (2007). Supervision as mentoring: The role of power and boundary crossing.
Studies in Continuing Education, 29(2), 207221.
doi:10.1080/01580370701424650
Moore, A. A., Miller, M. J., Pitchford, V. J., & Jeng,
L. H. (2008). Mentoring in the millennium: New
views, climate and actions. New Library World,
109, 7586. doi:10.1108/03074800810846029
Payne, S. C., & Huffman, A. H. (2005). A longitudinal examination of the influence of mentoring
on organizational commitment and turnover. Academy of Management Journal, 48, 158168.
Raabe, B., & Beehr, T. A. (2003). Formal mentoring versus supervisor and coworker relationships:
Differences in perceptions and impact. Journal of
Organizational Behavior, 24(3), 271. doi:10.1002/
job.193
Ragins, B. R., Cotton, J. L., & Miller, J. S.
(2000). Marginal mentoring: The effects of type
of mentor, quality of relationship, and program
design on work and career attitudes. Academy
of Management Journal, 43(6), 11771194.
doi:10.2307/1556344
266
endnote
1
For most of KU Libraries partners this agreement helped to mitigate the early challenges
of cementing a mentoring relationship by
providing some guidance and direction for
discussions around potentially hot topics
like confidentiality; however, it was not
enough to overcome the artificial nature of
all of the arranged pairings.
267
Chapter 16
aBstract
Numerous academic libraries participate in their campuses systems for faculty status for librarians, in
separate tracks or identical tracks as those for teaching faculty. In either case, a practice is to encourage or require mentoring for librarians without tenure or permanent status. This chapter will cover the
special challenges and benefits of mentoring and faculty status, the need for mentoring, and processes
for best practices to make mentoring meaningful for all involved. The chapter will draw on the authors
experiences, an environmental scan, a survey of selected institutional practice where librarians have
faculty status, and published research and related literature. It will also feature mentoring programs
developed by various institutions, including the University of Maryland Libraries.
IntrodUctIon
This chapter is written from the vantage points of
three individuals with faculty status at the University of Maryland Libraries, two of whom do not
have permanent status and one who does. One is
a curator, one is a human resources professional,
and the third is a librarian by profession. However,
despite distinctive backgrounds, all are or have been
subject to the same requirements for promotion and
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-601-8.ch016
Copyright 2010, IGI Global. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited.
2.
3.
BacKgroUnd
Mentoring in the workplace is not new. It has been
prevalent in society for centuries and has woven
its way into the work environment. Mentor refers
to a trusted friend, counselor, or teacher. The word
dates to Homers Odyssey, in which Odysseus
planned to leave for the Trojan Wars and asked
268
describes faculty mentoring as providing professional socialization including entry into a disciplinary network. Ideally, the mentor also becomes
a sounding board and supporter, who teaches the
tricks of the trade and survival strategies to the
mentee. Most often the mentor serves to help the
mentee become successful at his/her academic
institution. It is also possible that the mentor
will be able to serve as a guide and resource in
dealing with the broader scholarly and academic
community, both nationally and internationally.
(Popper, 2007, p.3).
Whether in the academy, the private or public
sectors, mentoring remains a popular and useful
tool in the workplace. Since there are so many
benefits to mentoring, its migration from the
social culture into the subculture of work is no
surprise. Mentoring can be a critical means to
an end as it serves to develop talent, plan for
succession of leadership, identify employee
needs and resources, and create opportunities
for information exchange. At the University of
Maryland, mentoring is strongly encouraged and
supported among both the teaching and library
faculty. The UML have a history of interest and
support in developing and maintaining a strong
and successful faculty mentoring program. More
recently, UML reviewed and updated their existing
Faculty Mentoring Program and took considerable
time and effort to streamline the process and to
remove identifiable barriers, in order to encourage participation of the library faculty. All UML
faculty without permanent status are now part of
the Faculty Mentoring Program.
challenges, BenefIts,
and PractIces of
MentorIng PrograMs
challenges
This section first highlights some of the challenges
of mentoring within an organization generally,
Organizational Issues
Organizational environments that proactively
support a mentoring program provide the greatest opportunity for success of the program and its
participants. Whether the organization is a business setting or in higher education, challenges for
mentoring programs may arise in various forms
of resistance. Benefits can be derived from facing and dealing with challenges associated with
a lack of vision and mission, failure to educate
members of the academy about the program,
inadequate implementation due to financial or
other constraints, achieving the correct match
between mentor and the mentee, and absence of
an assessment tool.
Organizational vision and mission, together
with education, help to promote the mentoring
program and to establish the need to mentor as
part of an organizations internal value system.
Providing the time, the training, and the financial
support necessary for implementation further
demonstrates the organizations advocacy of
professional development through mentoring.
Additionally, a mentoring program should pay
attention to what constitutes a compatible match
based on the specific skills, common interests, and
abilities of the mentor and the mentee. Finally,
an organization needs to allow for exploration
of other matches should the original pairing not
be successful.
As the organization works to resolve these issues, the challenges and priorities will shift. These
shifts will be influenced by a rapidly changing
technology, succession plans, and maintenance
of institutional knowledge. However, even where
programs succeed, the organization should continue to assess and flexibly modify the mentoring
program when appropriate. The assessment should
integrate a level of accountability that examines
269
librarianship
The portfolio for librarianship may include reference or information service, bibliographic instruction, collection development, the management
and maintenance of said collections and/or staff,
the creation of guides, or otherwise contributing
to the collective work of the larger organization.
These duties constitute a full-time position that
leaves little time for additional requirements of
service or scholarship and creativity.
The benefits of faculty status for librarians are
frequently equated to those for teaching faculty:
encouragement to pursue research and creative
endeavors, continuing professional and intellectual development, self-governance, and the
personal reward and satisfaction that come from
teaching or instruction. An additional benefit (or
a concern) is the relief from duties that support
staff can perform. Mitchell and Morton (1992)
270
2.
3.
A mentor must remain aware of the performance demands of the librarians appointment.
One consideration is the time the appointment
provides for career development towards pro-
service
The service criterion for faculty librarians creates both opportunities and challenges. Faculty
librarians are commonly encouraged to serve
locally, at the institutional level, and nationally,
in professional organizations. A service portfolio can include membership in professional
organizations that are directly related to the appointment duties or the subject specialization;
holding elected offices or serving on committees
for such organizations; membership on library
system committees; and membership on campus
or university system committees. Even with such
a variety of opportunities available, librarians
face obstacles to service.
A significant challenge is time, as identified
by Byrne (2003). With a full-time position, the
librarian must designate time to attend meetings
and conferences, read or participate in online
discussions, and read professional journals and
newsletters. Furthermore, librarians new to the
profession frequently cannot clearly determine
which professional organizations are right for
their careers. In these instances, mentees should
consult about organizations that can provide the
most benefits. Next, the librarian is faced with
the challenge of finding engaging and worthwhile
service opportunities within a chosen organization.
Mentors can make introductions and advise on
service opportunities that yield the highest return
for the time invested (Field, 2001). These service
opportunities are more easily met when there is
institutional support for costs such as conference
fees and travel expenses. Some institutions such as
271
Benefits of Mentoring
The challenges depicted above populate the main
components of the faculty librarians career. As
stated, the presence of mentoring can assist with
the oscillations of each. Yet, there are additional
benefits for all involved: the mentee, mentor, and
the institution.
Munde observes that mentees can benefit by
receiving higher salaries, experiencing greater
success for promotion, and enjoying satisfaction
with both their career and institution. Zellers et
al. (2008), through their evaluation of studies for
272
273
Mentor Qualifications
One common factor at five of the ten institutions
examined here (SUNY-Albany, Oklahoma State
University, Rutgers, LSU, and UML) is the tenure
status of mentors. The ideal mentor is not only
tenured, but has navigated the institutions process
274
275
Best PractIces of
MentorIng for lIBrarIans
wIth facUlty statUs
2.
3.
4.
5.
276
6.
Thus, it is vital that the programs basic elements of are clearly defined. Furthermore,
the consequences are real for the newer
faculty member who mistakenly operates
outside the APT processes of the institution.
The status of the mentoring program must be
clear, promoted, and consistently applied.
7. There is a step-by-step process for matching
and training potential mentees and mentors.
Clarity will contribute to the mentoring
programs success. The process should be
efficient and not bogged down in excessive
procedures and paperwork.
8. The individuals or groups coordinating the
program are identified, and responsibilities
and authority are defined. Those participating in the program must know whom to turn
to for support or submission of evaluative
documentation.
9. Options are identified for the mentor-mentee
relationship to end, should interests or needs
shift. It is also useful to define when the
relationship can end naturally, such as in
the attainment of tenure.
10. An ongoing process for evaluating the program is outlined, as well as a process for
changing and improving the program as
evaluations indicate. The field of librarianship evolves perpetually. APT requirements
are also frequently adjusted to match the
trends in higher education (Field, 2001).
Therefore, periodic evaluation of the mentoring programs can enable them to stay
relevant and useful to the library system.
These recommended best practices are a good
starting point for instituting a program. They
address the basic mechanics, attributes, and
benefits surrounding mentoring. Additional best
practices may result from comprehensive research
into the impact of mentoring on promotion and
retention.
277
conclUsIon
Research and writing about mentoring are done in
an environment rich with previous research and
writing and can renew individual commitment
to meeting the challenges and taking advantage
of the opportunities to mentor and be mentored.
Especially in an academic environment where
librarians have faculty status, and where mentoring
is not or should not be optional or voluntary, the
stimulus to renewed institutional commitment to
the principles and practices of mentoring is needed.
The themes in this chapter serve to encourage
as well as inform. Given the rapidly changing
landscapes of information delivery and library
service and operations, librarians as information
278
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Report, 221, 5-8. Retrieved March 25, 2009, from http://
www.arl.org/bm~doc/newhires.pdf
Wilder, S. J. (2003). Demographic change in academic
libraries. Washington, DC: Association of Research
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Wilder, S. J. (2007). The ARL youth movement: Reshaping the ARL workforce. ARL: A Bimonthly Report on
Research Library Issues & Actions, (254), 1-4.
Wildman, S. (2002). Making systems of privilege visible.
In White Privilege: Essential Readings on the other Side
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307
Compilation of References
308
309
Elisabeth Pankl is a Humanities Librarian at Kansas State University Libraries. She earned her MLS
from the University of North Texas in 2005. Ms. Pankls research interests include rhetorical literacy,
spatiality, and critical, literary geography.
Danielle Theiss-White is the General Reference Coordinator at K-State Libraries, Kansas State
University, Manhattan, Kansas. She earned her MLS as well as an MA in Religious Studies from the
University of Missouri, Columbia in 2005. Her research interests focus on the assessment and management of reference services, virtual reference services, staff training and continuing education, library
management, leadership training, and professional development.
Mary C. Bushing, library educator and consultant, has worked in all types of librariescorporate,
public, government and academic in the course of her long career. In addition to an MLS from Dominican
University, she has a doctorate in adult & higher education from Montana State University where she did
her primary research on the socialization and professional development of individuals working in very
small rural libraries. She coordinated the Mountain Plains Library Associations Leadership Institute
for five years, has held numerous elected and appointed professional positions. Among her many publications is a manual on collection assessment that has been translated into a number of languages, most
recently Italian. She has done consulting and teaching across the U.S. and in Europe and New Zealand
with an emphasis on collection development, organizational culture, and professionalism.
***
Stephanie Alexander is a Social Sciences Reference and Instruction Librarian at the University of
Colorado (CU) at Boulder. She earned her Master of Science in Information degree from the University
of Michigan and a BA degree in Mass Communications from the University of California at Berkeley.
She provides general reference services and bibliographic instruction at Norlin Library, the main humanities and social sciences library on the Boulder campus. She also serves as the library liaison to the
Sociology and Communication departments and the School of Journalism and Mass Communication,
and is responsible for collection development in those areas. She currently chairs the Committee on
Recruitment to the Profession of Academic Librarianship at the CU Libraries.
James P. Ascher is Assistant Professor and a Rare Book Cataloger at the University of Colorado at
Boulder. He also works as Program Staff at Rare Book School, an independent non-profit educational
Copyright 2010, IGI Global, distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited.
institute supporting the study of the history of books and printing and related subjects. He earned his
M.L.S as an IMLS ALSTARS Fellow at the University of South Florida where he also earned his B.A.
as a double major in Humanities and Mathematics. He has also earned an M.S. in Mathematics from
the University of Florida. He was the 2008 William Reese Fellow in American Bibliography, and currently serves as a member of the Recruitment to the Profession of Academic Librarianship Committee
at the University of Colorado at Boulder Libraries. He has mentored students interested in rare books,
librarianship and cataloging.
Toni Anaya is the Multicultural Studies librarian at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln in Lincoln,
Nebraska where she is a member of an innovative Multicultural Services Team and serves as the liaison librarian to the Institute of Ethnic Studies. Her master in library science is from the University of
Arizona, where she also worked as Library Information Analyst for several years coordinating billing
and fee recovery for the Libraries before coming to Nebraska. Toni also held a position with the public
library system in Tucson, Arizona. Toni is currently an active member of the Nebraska Library Association and ALA, especially ACRL and REFORMA, working on several committee assignments. In
addition to her work in libraries, Toni is an avid roller skater who enjoys spending time with family,
cooking and caring for her menagerie of pets which include two tortoises, a spoiled Chihuahua and an
equally spoiled hedgehog.
William Black is Administrative Services Librarian & Professor at the Walker Library at Middle
Tennessee State University. He is the author of a number of articles on the human services component
in libraries, one of the coauthors of the ACRL White Paper - Recruitment and Retention: A Professional
Concern (2002), and editor of the book, Libraries and Student Assistants: Critical Links (Haworth
Press, 1995).
Matthew Brower is a Business Reference and Instruction Librarian with the University Libraries at
the University of Colorado at Boulder. He earned a Masters in Library Science from Indiana University
in Bloomington and a B.A. in German from DePauw University. He provides reference and instruction
services for the William M. White Library in the Leeds School of Business at the University of Colorado
at Boulder, and is the bibliographer for the Library Science collection. Within the University Libraries,
he is a member of the Recruitment to the Profession of Academic Librarianship Committee, Libraries
Advisory Board, and the Web Advisory Committee.
Phillipa Brown has held senior level certification as a professional in human resources for 22 years.
She has a masters degree in Human Resources from Bowie State University. She heads the Human
Resources Office for the University of Maryland Libraries. Ms. Brown has broad experience in the full
range of human resources functions, in both the public and private sectors, and especially in employee
relations, mediation, training (including management training), diversity and working with a variety of
groups on diversity initiatives. She helped update University of the UM Libraries mentoring program
and create a Mentoring Committee. Ms. Browns professional memberships include American Library
Association, Human Resource Society of Prince Georges County (MD), and Society for Human Resource Management. She has worked extensively with the Mediation Board and the Commission on
Persons with Disabilities, both of Prince Georges County, and as a District of Columbia Superior Court
mediator.
310
Jeanette Buckingham is Librarian Emerita in the John W. Scott Health Sciences Library at the University of Alberta. She has been a medical librarian for almost 30 years, and continues to be involved
as an instructor in the medicine and rehabilitation medicine programs at the university. She has been
an informal mentor to younger colleagues and to library science students for many years. She has been
involved in the mentorship program for Academic Library Interns for the past five years, as both mentor
and coordinator of the interns mentors; her next tasks include mentoring her successor in this role and
helping develop a mentorship program for new librarians at the University of Alberta.
Peggy Cabrera works as a reference and instruction librarian at the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Library at San Jos State University. She is the library liaison to the Environmental Studies, Humanities and Kinesiology departments and the Global Studies program. Ms. Cabrera is very interested in
research on the recruitment of minority librarians and IMLS training programs having been a Knowledge River Scholar at the University of Arizona. Peggy has been actively involved in REFORMAs
northern California chapter, Bibliotecas Para la Gente having just completed service as the 2008/09
President. In this role Ms. Cabrera has been actively involved in reaching out to students, and chair of
the Rita Torres/BPLG Library Science Student Scholarship.
Gina R. Costello is the Digital Services Librarian at LSU Libraries Special Collections. She currently
oversees all digital projects and manages the Digital Services unit. She earned a Masters in Library
and Information Science (MLIS) in 2004 from the University of Tennessee and a Bachelors degree in
English from Mississippi College. She is involved in the state-wide LOUISiana Digital Library, www.
louisianadigitallibrary.org, (LDL) and is past chair and founder of the LDL Committee. Ms. Costello
was responsible for overseeing the 2006-2008 Louisiana Board of Regents grant Louisiana Historical
Newspapers: Preservation and Access to purchase $400,000 of equipment and digitize 100 issues of
historic Louisiana newspapers. She served as Co-PI of a 2007 Louisiana Sea Grant regrant to digitize
historic photos of coastal Louisiana. She has presented and written on digital project management,
online exhibitions, and grey literature.
Michael A. Crumpton is currently the Assistant Dean for Administrative Services for the University
Libraries at The University of North Carolina at Greensboro. He was previously Director of Library
Services at Wake Technical Community College in Raleigh, North Carolina and Access Services Manager
for the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County. Michael holds a MLS from the University
of Kentucky and a BS in Business Administration from the University of Central Florida, as well as
certificates in Community College Teaching and as a Senior Human Resource Professional. Michael
is active in space planning and facility re-purposing activities as well as budget and human resource
administration and implementation.
Alice Daugherty received her MLIS from Wayne State University in 2003. Currently, Daugherty
is the Assessment and Information Literacy Librarian at Louisiana State University Libraries. She is
part of a departmental team that delivers information literacy instruction through collaborative efforts
with faculty as well as through teaching credit-bearing courses, such as LIS 1001 Library Research
Methods and Materials. She actively serves within the American Library Association (ALA), where
she has held positions on the executive board of the Distance Learning Section of the American College
311
and Research Libraries and chaired committees for ALAs New Members Round Table. Her research
centers on information literacy, instructional design, and reference services.
Janine Golden is a tenured track Assistant Professor teaching in the MLS distance education program at the School of Library and Information Studies, at Texas Womans University, Dentn, Texas.
Dr. Goldens areas of expertise lie in leadership development, management, career development strategies, the mentoring process, public libraries, and library administration/management. As a current day
practitioner and educator, her research path concerns factors and strategies related to career development success for library emerging leaders, focusing on the mentoring process. Affiliated with this is
her work at the State Library and Archives of Florida relative to the creation of a mentoring program,
succession planning, assisting libraries with employee retention; her current work at Texas Womans
University involving the creation of a mentoring program for library directors in small community libraries in Texas; and her work with the development of The American Library Associations LLAMA
Mentoring Committee.
Christy Groves is currently Coordinator of User Services and Assistant Professor at the James
E. Walker Library, Middle Tennessee State University. For nearly fifteen years she has been directly
involved in recruitment, supervision, and development of library faculty and staff and has headed a
number of service excellence initiatives.
Suliman Hawamdeh, Ph.D., is a professor in the Knowledge Management program at the University
of Oklahoma School of Library and Information Studies. Dr. Hawamdeh founded and directed the first
Master of Science in Knowledge Management program in Asia at Nanyang Technological University
in Singapore. He was the founding president of the Information and Knowledge Management Society
(iKMS) from 1998-2003. He is the founding Chair of the International Conference on Knowledge Management (ICKM). Dr. Hawamdeh is the founding editor-in-chief of the first refereed journal in knowledge
management, The Journal of Information & Knowledge Management. He is also the editor of a book
series on Innovation and Knowledge Management, published by World Scientific. Dr. Hawamdeh was
the Managing Director of ITC Information Technology Consultant Ltd. in the period from 1993-1997.
Merinda Kaye Hensley is the Visiting Instructional Services Librarian and Assistant Professor for
Library Administration at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. She coordinates several instruction programs for graduate students and faculty including course-integrated library instruction as well
as The Savvy Researcher, a series of open workshops that focus on advanced research and information
management skills. A team of librarians and graduate assistants support all instruction through a peer
learning program. Her research interests include the process of learning how to teach and the information literacy needs of graduate students. Merinda is a graduate of the ACRL Institute for Information
Literacy, Immersion Programs Teacher and Program Track.
Deborah Hicks is an Academic Library Intern at the University of Alberta; at the University of Alberta, she works as a Public Service Librarian in the Rutherford Humanities and Social Sciences Library.
She holds a Master of Arts in History from York University and a Masters of Library and Information
Studies from Dalhousie University. During her time at the University of Alberta she has able to grow
as a new professional with the support of both her supportive mentors and supervisors.
312
Charlene Kellsey is Associate Professor, and Faculty Director of the Acquisitions Department in the
Libraries of the University of Colorado at Boulder. She earned a B.A. in Medieval Studies at Skidmore
College, an M.A. in Medieval History at San Jose State University, and an M.L.S at the University of
Maryland. She was the founding chair of the Recruitment to the Profession Committee of the Western
European Studies Section, Association of College and Research Libraries, as well as the founding chair
of the University of Colorado Libraries Recruitment to the Profession of Academic Librarianship Committee. She also serves as library liaison for the Classics department, and has been a mentor for two
fellows in the program described in this chapter.
Margaret Law, Associate University Librarian, University of Alberta, holds a Master of Library
Science degree from the University of British Columbia and a Master of Business Administration degree
from Athabasca University. She is a frequent speaker at library conferences on various management
topics, including succession planning, personal responsibility and mentoring. Her current research
interests are in the area of self-identity for librarians and workplace characteristics, both in Canada and
international settings. She was previously employed at an urban public library, a regional library and a
library consortium. She frequently serves as a mentor for librarians new to the profession, but not when
she is their supervisor.
Aimee Loya has focused her career on the development of nonprofit and public organizations. Aimee
currently serves as Program Officer on the Capacity Building Team of First 5 LA, a nonprofit grantmaking organization in Los Angeles. Previously, as Organizational Services Coordinator for the California
Association Against Sexual Assault, Aimee provided training and technical assistance in management
and organizational development to a statewide network of agencies. Prior to joining First 5 LA, Aimee
served as Training and Organizational Development Officer at the University of California, Irvine Libraries, working to create a training and capacity building program supporting and developing the skills
of staff across the organization. Aimee received a masters degree in Nonprofit Administration from the
University of San Francisco and received a bachelors degree from University of California, Berkeley.
Betsy Van der Veer Martens, Ph.D., is an assistant professor in the Knowledge Management program at the University of Oklahoma School of Library and Information Studies, where she teaches in
the areas of competitive intelligence, digital assets, and information architecture. Her background is in
business-to-business publishing and marketing research.
Charlene Maxey-Harris is currently the Diversity Librarian and Assistant Professor at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. As Diversity Librarian and member of the Multicultural Services Team,
Ms. Maxey-Harris is responsible for working with faculty and staff to plan and implement the librarys
diversity initiatives. Ms. Maxey-Harris is also chair of the UNL Diversity Committee and past chair
of the Nebraska Library Association Diversity Committee. Current ALA committee appointments include ACRL Racial and Ethnic Diversity, Co-Chair of the LLAMA Diversity Discussion Group, and a
member of the Black Caucus of ALA. Prior to UNL appointments, she was the Education Coordinator
at the McGoogan Medical Library at University of Nebraska Medical Center and a reference librarian
at Dartmouth College. Ms. Maxey-Harris holds a MLS from the University of Missouri-Columbia and
a BS degree from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
313
Gail Munde is currently Assistant Professor of Library Science at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina. Prior to teaching, she worked in academic libraries for 25 years as a department
chair and Associate Director/Dean, holding positions at the University of Kansas, East Carolina University and the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Her research interests are in library human resource
management, professional development and library finance. She is a certified Professional in Human
Resources and received an MLS from Emporia State University and a PhD in Library Science from
the University of North Texas. She has co-authored two books and written numerous journal articles,
book chapters, and film and book reviews.
Vincent J. Novara is the Curator for Special Collections in Performing Arts at the Michelle Smith
Performing Arts Library at the University of Maryland, where he earned his Bachelor of Music and
Master of Music degrees. At UM, he has worked as a performing arts archivist since 1994. As a member
of the UM Libraries faculty assembly, Novara has served on the Faculty Annual Review Oversight
Committee and its Mentoring Subcommittee, the Special Committee on Faculty Mentoring, and a stafforiented Mentoring Task Force. Novara has published on performing arts related topics in Notes, the
journal of the Music Library Association, and Choice. He has given several presentations at professional
conferences focusing on archival collections and archives management.
George I. Paganelis was born in Athens, Greece and raised in San Jos, CA. He graduated magna
cum laude from the University of California, Davis with a degree in ancient history, then obtained a
masters degree in classics at the University of Colorado at Boulder, and finally received a masters degree in library and information science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Since 2003
he has served as Curator of the Tsakopoulos Hellenic Collection in the University Library at California
State University, Sacramento. He has been active in ACRLs Western European Studies Section (WESS)
and currently serves as Chair of its Recruitment to the Profession Committee. He is also Chair of the
Library Committee of the Modern Greek Studies Association (MGSA) and serves on the Executive
Committee of the nascent Collaborative Project for Hellenic Resources, an initiative nearing formal
status under the Global Resources Network of CRL. He has published articles in the Journal of Modern
Greek Studies and is interested in Classics/Hellenic studies librarianship.
Anchalee Panigabutra-Roberts (Joy) is an assistant professor holding the position of Catalog &
Metadata Services Librarian, Multicultural Services Team Member and Womens and Gender Studies
Faculty/Subject Specialist at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries. Her cataloging specialization
includes original and complex cataloging of monographs, East-Asian language materials, non-music
multimedia and other digital formats. Her multicultural services specialization includes Asian Pacific
American Studies and Womens and Gender Studies. Before UNL, she worked in various academic
libraries including University of Wisconsin-Madison, Cornell University, St. Cloud State University
(Minnesota), and had three years of full-time teaching experience in a library science program in Canada. She earned a B.A. in English (Linguistics) from Chiangmai University, Thailand, B.A. in English
(Literature) from St. Olaf College, Northfield, MN, Master of Arts (Library and Information Studies)
and also a Specialist Degree (post-master) from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Jeff Paul is Project Manager for the Librarians for Tomorrow Program at San Jose State University.
Jeffs career includes a variety of positions in the SJSU Library - reference librarian, Head of Media
314
Services, Head of Systems, Acting Assistant & Associate Director of Access and Bibliographic Services
and Director of the Librarys Cultural Heritage Center. Jeff served as Director of the Chicano Library
Resource Center at SJSU for nearly three decades. He has taught in Mexican American Studies, the
Metropolitan University Scholars Program (MUSE first year experience for freshman) and has served
as an adjunct professor in the School of Library and Information Science at SJSU since 1994.
Doralyn Rossmann serves as Collection Development Librarian/Team Leader and Assistant Professor at Montana State University Libraries. She holds a B.A. in English and Political Science and
an M.S.L.S. from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Additionally, she has a Masters in
Public Administration from Montana State University. Her interest in organizational culture and group
dynamics comes from over fifteen years experience in academic libraries and from an appreciation of
the role each individual plays in serving the public interest. A third-generation librarian, she previously
served as a student assistant, a librarian in reference, instructional technologies, GIS, and systems. She
is inspired by the words of Mary Parker Follett: Leaders and followers are both following the invisible
leader - the common purpose.
Rachel Kuhn Stinehelfer is the Human Resources Librarian for the University Libraries at The
University of North Carolina at Greensboro. She holds a MLIS from UNCG and a BA in Art History
from Wake Forest University. Rachel spent nine years at North Carolina State University advancing
through a variety of positions including Academic Personnel Librarian and Visual Resources Librarian.
Rachel was an original NCSU Library Fellow and has experience in recruitment and performance management. She is currently active in planning and facilitating diversity and inclusiveness committees and
events both at the library and university level. She chairs the University Libraries Staff Development
Committee that continuously seeks new and innovative ways to provide development opportunities to
library faculty and staff.
Deborah Stansbury Sunday is the Associate University Librarian for Administrative Services at the
University of California, Irvine, with overall responsibility for the Libraries fiscal, human resources,
training and facilities programs. Deb is an active contributing member of ALA and LLAMA. Deb began her career at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor in the Research Libraries Residency Program
and later served as the Libraries Diversity Librarian. She held the position of Campus Librarian at the
University of Washington, Tacoma. Prior to going to UCI, Deb was Assistant Vice Provost for University Libraries at the University of Connecticut. Deb received a bachelors degree from California State
University at Fullerton and a masters degree in Information and Library Science from the University
of Texas at Austin.
Joel B. Thornton, CPA is as a Business Librarian for the West Campus Library at Texas A&M
University, where he participates in collection development, reference, and instruction. Additionally,
Mr. Thornton serves as the liaison to the Finance and Accounting departments at the Mays School of
Business. Prior to joining Texas A&M, Mr. Thornton served as a Financial Analyst at Electronic Data
Systems (EDS) providing business analysis and insight to operational units. He posses over thirteen
years of financial management experience in various industries including: information technology,
airline transportation, manufacturing, and energy. Mr. Thornton earned a B.B.A in Accounting from
315
Pittsburg State University and a Masters in Information Science from University of North Texas. He
is a 2005 ALA Spectrum Scholar.
M. Jane Williams directs the Planning and Administrative Services Division for the University
of Maryland Libraries. Among previously held positions are acting executive director and research
associate for the U.S. National Commission on Libraries and Information Science, and several positions with the State Library of North Carolina, including state librarian. Ms. Williams also served as
associate director for the Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County. Her MSLS is from the
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and her BA from Pfeiffer College (now University). Ms.
Williams is active in the Library Leadership and Management Association. Special interests include
diversity, organizational climate and staff development.
Diana Wu is a reference and instruction librarian at the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Library, a joint
use library between San Jose State University and San Jose Public Library. She is the librarian liaison
for international students and extended study programs. She also serves as the coordinator for library
faculty mentoring program in 2009-2010. Ms. Wu has been active in library and other professional organizations. She has been elected to ALA council as council-at-large for 2009-2012 term. She is a former
president of Chinese American Librarian Association, an affiliate of ALA. In 2007 she was awarded a
$5000 ALA RUSA-BRASS-Emerald Research Grant to support her sabbatical project. Furthermore,
Diana was recognized as one of the 40 outstanding alumni by the School of Library and Information
Science, San Jose State University to celebrate its 40th anniversary. In addition, she has received many
other awards and grants as well as has a substantial record of professional/scholarly publications and
presentations.
316
317
Index
A
academic environment 278
academic librarians 65, 70, 85, 95, 116,
117, 119, 120, 121, 124, 125, 126,
136, 161, 162, 168
academic librarianship 112, 113, 115, 116,
117, 118, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123,
124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 130, 131,
132, 133, 134
academic libraries 1, 3, 13, 14, 15, 33, 38,
48, 49, 51, 54, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61,
112, 113, 114, 117, 119, 120, 122,
123, 124, 130, 132, 133, 135, 136,
267, 268, 270, 271, 278, 279
academy 179, 180, 188
administrative leadership 49
American Association of University Professors
(AAUP) 86
American Council of Learned Societies
(ACLS) 126
American Council on the Teaching of Foreign
Languages (ACTFL) 126
American Libraries 67, 73, 75
American Libraries Association (ALA)
11, 14, 28, 48, 49, 51
American Library Association (ALA) 64, 65,
67, 72, 73, 81, 85, 94, 106, 117,
121, 122, 124, 125, 127, 128, 129,
130, 131, 132, 135, 198, 209, 216
American Library Associations (ALA) 239
American Philological Association (APA) 126
anecdotal 263, 274
Appointment, Promotion, and Tenure (APT)
272
APT criteria 275
B
Baby Boomer 28, 159, 225
best practices 49, 53, 57
blog 162, 168
brainstorm 96
broad organizational issues 31
Buff Bulletin 89
business management 238
business setting 269
Copyright 2010, IGI Global, distributing in print or electronic forms without written permission of IGI Global is prohibited.
Index
C
capability development 195, 199, 201, 202
Capability Development Model (CDM) 195
career development 252, 254, 263, 265
Career Development Compass (CDC) 194
career opportunities 191, 200
Carolina Academic Library Associates (CALA)
34
Certificate of Advanced Study (CAS) 123
client relationship management 147
cohort support 68
collaborative efforts 37, 56
collaborative team based atmosphere 56
collection development 2
commodified knowledge 151
communication technologies 144
competitive intelligence 143, 147
competitiveness 139, 140, 154, 158, 159
component 88, 93, 99, 102, 110
computer science 160, 161
Computerworld 160, 161, 168
conflict resolutions 2
consensus-based learning organization 173
contemporary human resource management
157
content analysis 139, 142
content management 143, 148, 149
Council on Libraries and Information Resources (CLIR) 29, 32
Council on Library and Information Resources
(CLIR) 122, 126, 127
critical tool 192
cross-disciplinary 140
CU Libraries 84, 95, 96, 97, 98, 100,
101, 102
cultural opportunities 228
curriculum vitae (CV) 95, 131
cyberspace 73
D
Data Management 143, 144, 148, 149
decision-making 56
Demographic shifts 158
demographic trends 47
318
E
economic growth 171
economy 247
e-mentoring 247
empirical data 56
Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI)
159
employment costs 159
environmental scan 267
e-portfolio 66
equal employment opportunity 3, 11
ethical obligations 252
evaluation 271, 272, 275, 277
exploratory survey 1
F
face-to-face meetings 163, 212
faculty librarian 271, 272, 273, 276
Faculty-Staff Development Committee (FSDC)
95
fast track 31
free-response 96
Fulbright-Hays (FH) Act 113, 114
functional problems 160
G
gardening metaphor 211
generation Xers 28
global challenges 157
global environment 247
global impact 139
graduate teacher program (GTP) 86, 87, 89,
90, 92, 93, 94, 96, 100, 101, 109
Index
H
hands-on experience 28
Higher Education Act 113
HRM 157, 158, 159, 160, 162, 164, 167
HR recruiter 10
human resource 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,
10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 22
human resource management (HRM) 157
Human resource personnel 1, 3, 14
human resource professionals 1, 2, 3, 4, 7,
8, 11, 12, 13, 14
Human Resources and Organizational Effectiveness (HROE) 172
I
individual skills 140
information literacy 179, 180, 181, 184,
186, 187, 188, 189
information organizations 157, 159, 160,
161, 162, 163, 164, 167
information professional (IP) 72, 83, 91, 191,
192
information science 170, 177
information security 144, 148
Information systems 147
information technology 141, 142, 144, 148
in-house 2, 35
instant messaging (IM) 130
Institute for Museum and Library Services
(IMLS) 48, 62, 63, 65, 68, 71, 72,
74, 79, 87, 106
Institute of Museum and Library Services
(IMLS) 239
instruction librarians 179, 180, 181, 182,
183, 186, 187, 189
integration-based orientation program
176, 177
integration-based orientation programs 177
inter-connections 88
interdisciplinary research 47
interesting approach 278
internal technology 161
International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA) 186, 190
international studies 113
J
Java 144
job description 139
job embeddedness
211, 212, 213, 214, 215, 216
job shadowing 128, 129, 130
Joint Conference of Librarians of Color (JCLC)
65
joint use library 66, 68
K
KM tasks 149
knowledge-based resources 141
knowledge chain model 150
knowledge collaboration 149
knowledge documentation 149
knowledge management 139, 140, 141,
142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 149,
150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156,
170
knowledge management performance 141
Knowledge Management Tools 145, 147
knowledge professional 140, 152
L
Leadership and Career Development Program
(LCDP) 50
leadership development 69, 70
leadership model, 212
leadership skills 206
less commonly taught languages (LCTLs) 114
librarians 27, 28, 29, 30, 32, 33, 34, 35,
36, 37, 38, 39
Librarians 179, 181, 182, 184, 187, 188
librarianship 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89,
91, 93, 94, 95, 97, 98, 99, 100,
101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107,
108, 110, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126,
127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133
319
Index
M
Master's in Library Science (MLS) 69, 74,
76, 87, 91, 104, 107, 111, 117, 118,
119, 121, 122, 123, 128, 132, 134,
135, 136
Medical Library Association (MLA) 198
mentee 268, 269, 270, 271, 272, 273, 274,
275, 276, 277
mentor 268, 269, 270, 271, 272, 273, 274,
275, 276, 277, 278, 279, 280
mentoring 11, 29, 31, 33, 34, 35, 49, 54,
57, 70, 88, 91, 92, 93, 94, 101, 102,
106, 124, 128, 252, 253, 254, 255,
256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 262,
263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269,
270, 272, 273, 274, 275, 276, 277,
278, 279, 280
320
mentoring assistance 70
mentoring capacity 272
mentoring model 237, 238, 239, 240, 244,
245, 246, 247, 248
mentoring program 237, 238, 239, 240, 241,
242, 243, 244, 245, 246, 247, 248,
267, 269, 270, 272, 273, 274, 275,
276, 277, 278, 279
mentoring relationship 253, 254, 255, 256,
257, 258, 260, 261, 262, 266
mentor-mentee relationships 184
mentor-protg relationship
251, 252, 253, 258, 260
mentor relationship 251, 252
Mentors 268, 271, 272, 276, 279
mentorship programs 91, 92
Microsoft Office 144
Millenials 28
Minnesota training program 50
minority librarians 35, 38, 47, 48, 49, 50,
53, 54, 55, 57, 60
MLIS programs 180
MLS program 245
model component 243
Modern Language Association (MLA)
86, 107, 133, 136
Multicultural Services Team
47, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58
multi-disciplinary 179
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator 13
N
National Defense Education Act (NDEA) 113
National Forum on Information Literacy
(NFIL) 186
navigation tool 191, 194, 202
networking opportunities 228
New Members Round Table (NMRT) 129
non-evaluative feedback 182
non-librarians 91
non-monetary 227
non-profits 237
non-supervisor mentors 256
non-traditional settings 195
Index
O
on-boarding 37
on-the-job training 29, 30
Oracle 144
organization 237, 238, 240, 243, 245, 246,
247, 250
organizational commitment 255, 256, 260,
262, 263, 264, 266
organizational context 253, 259
organizational culture 30, 33, 36, 39, 170,
171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 177, 206,
207, 208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213,
214, 216, 217, 252, 258, 259
organizational development 171, 172, 174
organizational direction 253
organizations 237, 238, 242, 247, 248
P
paraprofessionals 9
partnership empowering 237, 248
pedagogical 179, 180, 181, 184, 185, 187,
189
Peer coaching 186, 189
peer coaching structures 184
peer learning 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184
, 185, 186, 187, 188
Peer learning 182, 188
peer learning atmosphere 185
peer learning environment 180, 182, 188
peer learning program 181
peer support 69, 70, 80
PELSC mentors 244
PELSC program 245
performance appraisals 2, 14, 25
performance evaluation 13, 167
personal commitment 171
personal communication 274
personal growth tool 101
philosophy 140
positive work environment 49
private-sector 139, 141
private-sector organizations 139, 141
problem-solving opportunities 152
Productive interaction 34
professional capabilities 191, 192
Q
qualitative information 151
quantitative information 151
R
Rare Books and Manuscripts Section (RBMS)
85
recessionary economy 159
Recruitment Committee 84, 86, 87, 88, 89,
90, 91, 92, 95, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101,
102, 103, 104, 109, 126, 127, 128,
129, 130, 131, 132, 134
recruitment committees 124
recruitment resources 126
REFORMA 32
research faculty peers 276
Research Library Leadership Fellows (RLLF)
31
resource constraints 196
retention 4, 14, 35, 39, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50,
54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61
321
Index
S
safe environment 172, 176
San Jos Public Library (SJPL) 62
school-to-work transitions 258
search committee 50
self-assessment 240, 241, 242
self-reflection 185
SharePoint 144
social networking 66, 69, 70
society 268
Society for Human Resource Management
(SHRM) 158
Society of Biblical Literature (SBL) 127
Society of Competitive Intelligence (SCIP 200
sociologist 208
sociology 140
Socratic Portfolio 93
solo teaching 179, 183
space race 160
Special Libraries Association (SLA) 198
SQL Server 144
Staff Learning and Development Committee
(SLDC) 174
States Sunshine State Library Leadership Institute (SSLLI) 239
State University of New York (SUNY) 273
strategic direction 2
strategic management 147
structured orientation 171
student learning experience 184
subject specialist 78, 99, 104, 120
succession planning
28, 29, 30, 33, 34, 36, 38, 39
supervisor-employee relationship
252, 253, 255, 256, 261
supervisor-mentor relationship 252
T
Talent management 162, 168
technical literature 196
technical services 3
322
U
University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) 273
University of Maryland Libraries (UML) 268
University of Maryland (UML) 273
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
46, 47, 48, 52, 59
Unix 144
unpredictable environment 191, 192
V
Venn diagram 150
virtual meeting 129, 131
vital components 251
vital library 219
W
wellness education (WE) 72
Western European Studies Section (WESS) 85,
112, 113, 120, 125, 126, 127, 128,
129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 136
white paper 39, 50, 58, 61
work environment 49, 54, 55, 171
working environment 251
X
XML 144
Z
Zoomerang 5, 6